QuestionI live in northeast MO. I have a Aspen tree I brought here from CO. It has done well tell this year, I think I have cut worms in it. But would like to know for sure. The tree has fewer leaves than normal, and little limbs are showing up under tree, that look like they have been cut,. Some are fresh looking, others show that they have been cut longer. This is just because of the color of the end of limb.. I would like to know what to do, or try, would hate to loose my aspen tree, Also a red bud tree, that is within 25 foot of the aspen, is dying, had very few blooms this year and fewer leaves, but shows no sign of little branches being cut. Thanks for your time
AnswerThere are two insects that cut off twigs of hardwoods: the twig girdler and the twig pruner. Both of these insects belong to a group of beetles known as the long-horned wood borers.
The adult twig girdler cuts twigs off trees in late summer and fall. Eggs are laid in the section of the twigs that are cut off. These eggs hatch into whitish-colored, legless larvae. The larvae grow slowly during the winter and spring months as they feed and tunnel within the twig, then grow rapidly through the summer emerging as adults in August and September. The larvae usually take about one year to develop into an adult.
Adult twig pruners deposit eggs in slits in the bark near the tips of twigs and small branches in the spring. Upon hatching, the larvae begin feeding under the bark. As they grow and develop, the larvae feed down the center of the stem toward its base. In late summer, they sever the twig by making a spiral cut from the center of the twig outward to, but not through the bark. This thin layer of bark cannot hold the twig onto the branch and eventually the twig breaks off and falls to the ground with the larva still inside. The larva pupates within the twig and emerges as an adult the following spring or fall. It takes about a year for the twig girdler to develop from an egg into an adult.
About the only way to control the twig girdler and twig pruner is to collect the severed twigs containing the larvae and destroy them by burning, shredding, or removing the twigs from the area. Control of these insects with insecticides is not practical.
To determine if the twig was cut by the twig girdler or the twig pruner, examine the end where the cut was made. If the end of the twig looks like it was chewed from the outside in, and has an appearance much like the end of a tree that was cut down by a beaver, then the cut was made by the twig girdler. If the end of the twig looks like it was cut with a saw and there appears to be a spiral patterned cut radiating from the center of the twig outward, then the cut was made by the twig pruner.
I would fertilize both trees with 1 lb of 10-10-10 fertilizer per inch of trunk diameter scattered around the tree and watered in good. Apply just before a rain storm and you will not need to water.