Green Chimneys, Carmel, NY – Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) Training Workshop

Green Chimneys' Clearpool Campus 33 Clearpool Rd, Carmel, NY, United States

  The MaMA program of the Ecological Research Institute (see www.MonitoringAsh.org) provides constructive steps to be taken at each stage of Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) invasion, including pre-invasion as well as late stages when virtually all the ash in an area

CCE Orange County, NY – Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) Training Workshop

Cornell Cooperative Extension Orange County Education Center and 4-H Park, 300 Finchville Turnpike, Otisville, NY, United States

Learn how to help save ash from extinction! The MaMA program of the Ecological Research Institute (see www.MonitoringAsh.org) provides constructive actions to be taken at each stage of Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) invasion, including even pre-invasion as well as the

CCE Dutchess County, Millbrook, NY – Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) Training Workshop

Cornell Cooperative Extension Dutchess County 2715 US-44, Millbrook, NY, United States

Learn how to help save ash from extinction! The MaMA program of the Ecological Research Institute (see www.MonitoringAsh.org) provides constructive actions to be taken at each stage of Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) invasion, including even pre-invasion as well as the

NYS DEC office, Lowville, NY – Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) Training Workshop

NYS Department of Environmental Conservation, Lowville office 7327 State Route 812, Lowville, NY, United States

Learn how to help save ash from extinction! The MaMA program of the Ecological Research Institute (see www.MonitoringAsh.org) provides constructive actions to take at each stage of Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) invasion, including even pre-invasion and the final invasion stage,

CCE Oneida County, Oriskany, NY – Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) Training Workshop

Cornell Cooperative Extension Oneida County 121 Second Street, Oriskany, NY, United States

Learn how to help save ash from extinction! The MaMA program of the Ecological Research Institute (see www.MonitoringAsh.org) provides constructive actions to take at each stage of Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) invasion, including even pre-invasion and the final invasion stage,

Minnewaska State Park, Gardiner, NY – Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) Training Workshop

Minnewaska State Park 5080 Rte 44-55, Gardiner, NY, United States

We will be presenting a free workshop Thursday, 9/19, 9 am-12:30 pm at the Minnewaska State Park office, Peter’s Kill Area parking lot, 5080 Rte 44-55, Gardiner, NY 12525 on how to respond to Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) to both mitigate damage from this invasive beetle and promote

USFS webinar: A Call to Action for Ash Tree Conservation and Resistance Breeding

March 11, 2020 | 1:00-2:15pm ET for details see: www.fs.fed.us/research/urban-webinars/ A Call to Action for Ash Tree Conservation and Resistance Breeding Kathleen Knight, USDA Forest Service Jennifer Koch, USDA Forest Service Jonathan Rosenthal, Ecological Research Institute Ash tree species in

Webinar: How to join the MaMA Monitoring Plots Network

Register here. To find “lingering ash” – which likely hold the key to ash conservation through selective breeding – requires searching areas after particular percentages of ash have been killed by EAB. The MaMA Monitoring Plots Network enables this determination

Fox Forest, NH – Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) workshop

Fox Forest – Baldwin Environmental Center 309 Center Road, Hillsborough, NH 03244, New Hampshire

Although emerald ash borer (EAB) kills close to 100% of the mature native ash trees that it encounters in the Northeast, a very small percentage of the trees that it attacks not only survive, but remain healthy years after the

Ithaca, NY – Monitoring and Managing Ash (MaMA) workshop

Although emerald ash borer (EAB) kills close to 100% of the mature native ash trees that it encounters in the Northeast, a very small percentage of the trees that it attacks not only survive, but remain healthy years after the

King Farm, VT – MaMA workshop

Although emerald ash borer (EAB) kills close to 100% of the mature native ash trees that it encounters in the Northeast, a very small percentage of the trees that it attacks not only survive, but remain healthy years after the