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Can cutting trees save Adirondack hemlocks from tiny killer insect?
Summary by Adirondack Explorer
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1 Articles
Can cutting trees save Adirondack hemlocks from tiny killer insect?
Mike Federice walked atop a crunchy snowpack in January under feathery hemlock boughs at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry’s Pack Demonstration Forest in the southeastern Adirondacks. Underlying this peaceful scene is a stark reality: Just 10 miles away, hemlock woolly adelgids, insects the size of a pepper flake, are eating the trees and threatening this landscape. The loss of the second-most common tree species in this 2,500-a…
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