Hemlock Woolly Adelgid
Adelges tsugae (Annand)
Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda, Class: Insecta, Order: Homoptera, Family:
Adelgidae, Genus: Adelges
SAMAB Hemlock
Woolly Adelgid Fact Sheet (.pdf) |
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What is it?
Adelgids are aphid-like insects. The hemlock woolly adelgid
is a tiny exotic invasive species that gets its name from its woolly
white appearance and because
its
host
is the
hemlock tree (Tsugae species). The hemlock woolly adelgid
has a complex life cycle and produces two generations per year. Eggs
are brownish-orange
and wrapped in a white fluffy substance secreted by an adult female.
Reddish-brown nymphs (or crawlers) hatch from the eggs and use their
thread-like mouthpart to pierce a hemlock branch and suck sap from
the branch. These nymphs go through four stages before becoming adults
and also wrap themselves with a white, fuzzy covering. Adults are
reddish-purple and some have two pairs of wings. The flying adults
leave the hemlock in search of a secondary oriental spruce host (which
does not occur in the United States). The wingless adults stay on
the hemlock host and produce 50-300 eggs. Adults, as well as the
nymphs,
suck sap from young twigs on hemlock trees and cause the hemlock
needles to dry out and drop. This defoliation can cause the hemlock
tree to
die in only a few years.
Link to more detailed biological information: http://www.fs.fed.us/na/morgantown/fhp/hwa/pdfs/mcclure_hwa.pdf (.pdf,
1.4Mb)
How did it get here?
Adeleges tsugae is native to Asia where it is not a
problem to native hemlocks. It was introduced to the United States in
the 1920s
to the Pacific Northwest, and in the early 1950s to the Washington
DC and Richmond, Virginia areas.
Where is it now?
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It lacks natural enemies in North America, so it has since spread
throughout the eastern United States via wind, birds, mammals, human
activities, and the transport of infected nursery stock, creating
an extreme amount of damage to natural stands of hemlock, specifically
eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) and Carolina hemlock
(Tsuga caroliniana). The predicted spread rate is about
20 miles per year and its 2002 range was from South Carolina to New
Hampshire. |
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Click on the thumbnail to view printable map (.pdf, 566 kb) of
known occurrences of HWA in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
Created by Scott Kichman (scott_kichman@nps.gov),
June 2003. |
What’s being done about it?
To understand more about the problem and what is being done about it, click
here.
For more information, see these related
links.

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