The bug vs. bug strategy to defeat the emerald ash borer might just be working.
Tiny stingless wasps — the natural parasite introduced two years ago to defend Minnesota's massive ash population — are reproducing, spreading and killing ash borers along the way, the Minnesota Department of Agriculture reported Wednesday.
That makes Minnesota the second state, after Michigan, to document that adopting nature's way of slowing the ash borer might become an effective tool to stop the invasive pest that threatens the state's nearly 1 billion ash trees, and millions more in Wisconsin and Iowa.
Healthy wasp larvae were found this fall, for the first time, in trees at Great River Bluffs State Park near Winona, one of three sites in the state where they have been introduced to combat infestations. After raising the larvae to adults, researchers identified them as the offspring of the ones that had been introduced there in 2011.
"One of the great things is we found them half a mile from the nearest release site," said Monika Chandler, Biological Control Program Coordinator for the state Department of Agriculture. "That documents they are dispersing and spreading on their own."
The invasive ash borer has killed tens of millions of trees in 20 states and two Canadian provinces since it arrived from China about 20 years ago, apparently in wooden shipping crates sent to Michigan.
It was first found in Minnesota in St. Paul in May 2009, and infestations have been found in Ramsey and Hennepin counties in the metro area and Houston and Winona counties in the state's southeast corner. Ash borers have also been found in Superior, Wis., raising concerns about its spread to Duluth and the state's northeastern forests, where black ash is a dominant species.
The wasps, developed at a U.S. Department of Agriculture facility in Brighton, Mich., have now been deployed in 17 states. In Minnesota, they've been released at three sites in the metropolitan area and far southeast Minnesota.