For the best experienceDownload the Mobile App
App Store Play Store
State scientists are planting thousands of Oregon Ash trees in invasive beetle territory, hoping to find rare natural resistance
State scientists are planting thousands of Oregon Ash trees in invasive beetle territory, hoping to find rare natural resistance
State scientists are planting thousands of Oregon Ash trees in invasive beetle territory, hoping to find rare natural resistance

Published on: 09/16/2025

This news was posted by Oregon Today News

Go To Business Place

Description

The beetle is coming for Oregon Ash trees, but scientists and residents can help soften the blow.

Just outside Cottage Grove at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Dorena Research Center, scientists are playing a numbers game: They’re growing thousands of Oregon Ash, sourced from up and down the West Coast, hoping to find the rare tree with genetic resistance to the Emerald Ash Borer.

About one in 1,000 trees, or five of the 5,300 seedlings here, may be able to survive the beetle infestation, according to Dorena Center geneticist Richard Sniezko. “We’ve labeled each seedling, so when they’re planted out, there will be a tag on it. So we’ll know which parent tree it came off of.”

Richard Sniezko stands under an Oregon ash tree in Dorena. Yellow-brown seed pods, or samaras, hang from the tree around him.

It’s a gamble, but it could put the West Coast a step ahead of many other states, where people are now finding a few so-called “lingering,” living ash trees, and propagating them.

The invasive Emerald Ash Borer, or EAB, was first detected in Michigan in 2002. Its larvae have killed hundreds of millions of trees. By the time the beetles are spotted, they’ve likely been in an area for years. They can’t be exterminated.

Oregon Ash grows from British Columbia to southern California. It’s common in the Willamette Valley, and helps cool waterways and filter pollution.

Bracken Bing works with the seed propagation program at the USDA Dorena Center. She said these Oregon Ash seeds, now in the walk-in refrigerator, will soon be moved to the deep freezer.

Ash is also a popular street tree. The City of Eugene reports nine percent of its trees are Ash varieties. Sniezko said urban tree removal has cost eastern states hundreds of millions of dollars. Then there’s the loss of shade and the related human health toll.

“What I like to tell people,” he said, ”is that when some of these come in, sooner or later we have to realize that most of the standing trees, maybe 90, 95%, 99% of them, are gonna be gone.”

A freezer at the Dorena facility houses a potential backup solution. At 0° Fahrenheit, it’s shockingly cold. Sniezko said more than 40,000 seeds from various regional trees, including Oregon ash, are preserved here. Some Oregon Ash seeds have been sent to other seed banks, including one in Fort Collins, Colorado.

Being late to the invasion gives Oregon some advantages. Wyatt Williams, the Invasive Species Specialist with the Oregon Department of Forestry, said that includes working with the beetle’s natural predators, or “biological control agents.”

Each seedling is labeled with information about its parent tree. The parent tree, somewhere on the West Coast, is also marked with a metal label.

These Oregon Ash trees will be transplanted to various sites in the northern Willamette Valley this fall.

“We’ve had 20 years of science,” he told KLCC. ”So we have science on forest genetics, we have science on biological control. Thanks to the USDA and ODA, we were able to release biological control agents the first year. No other states are able to do that.”

Williams added that the ODF began proactively collecting Oregon Ash seeds in 2019. It’s those seeds that have become the seedlings at the Dorena center.

But Sniezko cautioned there’s a limit to how many trees can be saved.

“The individual trees that you value, there are, I think, chemical treatments that you can do,” he said, ”but, you know, we can’t treat millions of trees every year or every other year, across a forest landscape, so that’s not really a solution.”

Because the Dorena center is internationally known for studying tree’s resistance to pathogens, he proposed breeding ash from various locations and planting the tagged trees.

“When the Emerald Ash Borer comes through, we’ll see what’s left,” said Sniezko. ”We’ll know what the parent tree is, and then can get back to that tree and can maybe graft it into an orchard or root it or whatever.”

Williams said the seedlings raised in Dorena will be moved to four northern Willamette Valley plots this fall.

“One of the test locations is going to be at the ODF seed orchard outside Saint Paul, which is right in the middle of the two known populations of EAB in Oregon, that being the Forest Grove population and the Woodburn population,” he said, adding: ”It’s not inconceivable to think that EAB could be right there, right now.”

Emerald Ash Borer beetles leave D-shaped exit holes in Ash tree bark when they leave as adults. See OregonEAB.com for information on how to identify the trees and the beetles, and many other FAQs.

The Emerald Ash Borer has been found in six new locations in 2025. Multnomah County was just added to the list, with a confirmed sighting in Portland. Williams said the website OregonEAB.com has a map with a thick red line around the known sites. That’s the quarantine area.

“If you are inside the quarantine area, please do not move wood as you’re camping this fall, especially,” said Willams. ”Source your firewood at your destination, where you’re gonna be camping.”

Oregon's EAB quarantine area, as of September 11, 2025.

On the Oregon EAB website, you can type in an address and find the current guidance for that location, and residents can help state scientists by reporting suspected beetle signs online, or calling the state’s invasive species hotline at 1-866-INVADER.

People can also contribute by learning to identify ash trees and the signs of infestation. Sniezko was impressed that more than 1,000 people signed up to gather Oregon Ash seeds this fall for future propagation, and he says people can help after the beetle goes through.

“If there’s different people to monitor their areas and say, ‘Hey, 99% of trees are dead, but here’s a living one that’s pretty big and how come it’s not dead?’ It’s really up to you to help us find those rare parent trees that actually survive,” he said.

This republished story is part of OPB’s broader effort to ensure that everyone in our region has access to quality journalism that informs, entertains and enriches their lives. To learn more, visit opb.org/partnerships.

News Source : https://www.opb.org/article/2025/09/16/emerald-ash-borer-beetle-invasive-species-oregon-ash-trees-conservation/

Other Related News

Secret Stash
Secret Stash

09/16/2025

Oregons public workers in the dark on which private investments in their PERS fund actuall...

Dreaded Emerald Ash Borer Found Within Portland City Limits
Dreaded Emerald Ash Borer Found Within Portland City Limits

09/16/2025

For Portlands 100000 ash trees the tiny green insect might as well be Godzilla

Why this federal money is critical for school supplies in Utah
Why this federal money is critical for school supplies in Utah

09/16/2025

Utah GOP leaders have complained for years over shortfalls in what is called Payment in Li...

Dan Lanning praises Maalik Murphy, Oregon State offense: ‘They can take the top off’
Dan Lanning praises Maalik Murphy, Oregon State offense: ‘They can take the top off’

09/16/2025

Ahead of Oregons matchup with Oregon State Ducks coach Dan Lanning praised the speed and b...

ShoutoutGive Shoutout
500/500