New Jersey State Forester Lynn Fleming said not a single municipality has taken the state up on $10,000 grants to suppress the tree-killing southern pine beetle.
Fewer than 10 individual property owners have received one of the $7,500 grants made available near the beginning of this year.
Fleming said she doesn't think many people know just how serious a pine beetle infestation can be.
“Some people, I think, feel that, well, the tree just dies. They don't realize that the tree becomes a carrier for other trees,” Fleming said, meaning that infestations can jump from one tree to a neighboring tree.
The beetles chew their way through bark and deprive trees of the nutrients and water they need to survive. They have affected about 35,000 acres in New Jersey since they were discovered there about a decade ago.
Damage slowed down a bit this year though. That was partly, Fleming said, due to state suppression efforts, and partly due to the wet weather.
http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/...n-pine-beetles-?Itemid=3&linktype=hp_topstory
Fewer than 10 individual property owners have received one of the $7,500 grants made available near the beginning of this year.
Fleming said she doesn't think many people know just how serious a pine beetle infestation can be.
“Some people, I think, feel that, well, the tree just dies. They don't realize that the tree becomes a carrier for other trees,” Fleming said, meaning that infestations can jump from one tree to a neighboring tree.
The beetles chew their way through bark and deprive trees of the nutrients and water they need to survive. They have affected about 35,000 acres in New Jersey since they were discovered there about a decade ago.
Damage slowed down a bit this year though. That was partly, Fleming said, due to state suppression efforts, and partly due to the wet weather.
http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/...n-pine-beetles-?Itemid=3&linktype=hp_topstory