T. W. Davis
Michigan State University
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Featured researches published by T. W. Davis.
Journal of Economic Entomology | 2008
D. R. Smitley; T. W. Davis; E. J. Rebek
Abstract Our objective was to characterize the rate at which ash (Fraxinus spp.) trees decline in areas adjacent to the leading edge of visible ash canopy thinning due to emerald ash borer, Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire (Coleoptera: Buprestidae). Trees in southeastern Michigan were surveyed from 2003 to 2006 for canopy thinning and dieback by comparing survey trees with a set of 11 standard photographs. Freeways stemming from Detroit in all directions were used as survey transects. Between 750 and 1,100 trees were surveyed each year. A rapid method of sampling populations of emerald ash borer was developed by counting emerald ash borer emergence holes with binoculars and then felling trees to validate binocular counts. Approximately 25% of the trees surveyed for canopy thinning in 2005 and 2006 also were sampled for emerald ash borer emergence holes using binoculars. Regression analysis indicates that 41–53% of the variation in ash canopy thinning can be explained by the number of emerald ash borer emergence holes per tree. Emerald ash borer emergence holes were found at every site where ash canopy thinning averaged >40%. In 2003, ash canopy thinning averaged 40% at a distance of 19.3 km from the epicenter of the emerald ash borer infestation in Canton. By 2006, the point at which ash trees averaged 40% canopy thinning had increased to a distance of 51.2 km away from Canton. Therefore, the point at which ash trees averaged 40% canopy thinning, a state of decline clearly visible to the average person, moved outward at a rate of 10.6 km/yr during this period.
Journal of Economic Entomology | 2015
D. R. Smitley; Daniel A. Herms; T. W. Davis
ABSTRACT Protection of green ash trees (Fraxinus pennsylvanica Marshall) from the emerald ash borer (EAB), Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire, by soil applications of neonicotinoids (imidacloprid, clothianidin, and dinotefuran) was tested at five locations between 2005 and 2013. Application rate and spring versus fall application dates were evaluated in tests with neighborhood street trees and in one plantation of 65 ash trees. Insecticide treatments of ash trees at all five sites were initiated as the leading edge of the EAB invasion began to kill the first ash trees at each location. Trees were treated and evaluated at each site for 4 to 7 yr. Spring applications of imidacloprid were more efficacious than fall applications. Application rates of 0.8 g a.i./cm dbh or greater per year gave a higher level of protection and were more consistent than rates of 0.56 g a.i./cm dbh per year or less. The number of years between the first observation of canopy loss due to EAB and death of most of the control trees varied from three to seven years among test sites, depending on how many non-treated ash trees were nearby.
Arboriculture and Urban Forestry | 2011
Joseph J. Doccola; D. R. Smitley; T. W. Davis; John Joseph Aiken; Peter M. Wild
Journal of Economic Entomology | 1993
D. R. Smitley; T. W. Davis
Arthropod Management Tests | 1999
D. R. Smitley; T. W. Davis
Arthropod Management Tests | 1999
D. R. Smitley; T. W. Davis
Arthropod Management Tests | 2012
T. W. Davis
Arthropod Management Tests | 2009
D. R. Smitley; T. W. Davis; Royal G. Fader
Arthropod Management Tests | 2008
D. R. Smitley; T. W. Davis
Arthropod Management Tests | 2006
D. R. Smitley; T. W. Davis