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Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
Rich Braman
2026-03-17 15:30:03 -04:00
parent 3cbad94a08
commit bee4aa4e28
5 changed files with 151 additions and 141 deletions
@@ -24,38 +24,40 @@ The third case study examined the orange-striped oakworm moth, a native pest of
## YOUTUBE TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Introduction and speaker credentials
1:28 The disease triangle: pest, tree, and environment
3:02 The spiral of tree decline
6:07 Native vs. non-native pest and tree interactions
7:22 Example 1: Emerald ash borer (EAB) — overview
8:23 EAB life cycle and damage symptoms
10:48 EAB generation time and temperature effects
11:57 EAB spread across North America and firewood
13:47 EAB in Georgia and native ash species diversity
15:26 White fringetree as alternate EAB host
16:43 Global trade and non-native species introductions
18:20 The invasion curve: detection, eradication, and control
21:32 Why EAB is not a pest in Asia
22:34 Chemical control methods for EAB
23:57 Importation biological control: parasitoid wasps
28:01 Native natural enemies and the goal of balance
29:42 Example 2: Crapemyrtle bark scale (CMBS) — overview
31:47 CMBS biology, life cycle, and overlapping generations
33:47 CMBS invasion timeline and early detection
35:02 CMBS and the invasion curve in Georgia
36:06 CMBS host range expansion in North America
36:42 Urban heat island effects on scales
37:28 Chemical control options for CMBS
38:31 Natural enemies: lady beetles and lacewings
42:04 Balancing chemical and biological control for CMBS
42:25 Example 3: Orange-striped oakworm moth — overview
43:53 Oakworm life cycle and seasonal timing
44:51 Why urban and clonal trees are vulnerable
46:35 Natural enemies of the oakworm
47:56 Control decisions: damage thresholds and Btk
49:19 Presentation wrap-up and key takeaways
50:01 Moderator comments on CMBS expansion in Georgia
| Timestamp | Topic |
|-----------|-------|
| 0:00 | Introduction and speaker credentials |
| 1:28 | The disease triangle: pest, tree, and environment |
| 3:02 | The spiral of tree decline |
| 6:07 | Native vs. non-native pest and tree interactions |
| 7:22 | Example 1: Emerald ash borer (EAB) — overview |
| 8:23 | EAB life cycle and damage symptoms |
| 10:48 | EAB generation time and temperature effects |
| 11:57 | EAB spread across North America and firewood |
| 13:47 | EAB in Georgia and native ash species diversity |
| 15:26 | White fringetree as alternate EAB host |
| 16:43 | Global trade and non-native species introductions |
| 18:20 | The invasion curve: detection, eradication, and control |
| 21:32 | Why EAB is not a pest in Asia |
| 22:34 | Chemical control methods for EAB |
| 23:57 | Importation biological control: parasitoid wasps |
| 28:01 | Native natural enemies and the goal of balance |
| 29:42 | Example 2: Crapemyrtle bark scale (CMBS) — overview |
| 31:47 | CMBS biology, life cycle, and overlapping generations |
| 33:47 | CMBS invasion timeline and early detection |
| 35:02 | CMBS and the invasion curve in Georgia |
| 36:06 | CMBS host range expansion in North America |
| 36:42 | Urban heat island effects on scales |
| 37:28 | Chemical control options for CMBS |
| 38:31 | Natural enemies: lady beetles and lacewings |
| 42:04 | Balancing chemical and biological control for CMBS |
| 42:25 | Example 3: Orange-striped oakworm moth — overview |
| 43:53 | Oakworm life cycle and seasonal timing |
| 44:51 | Why urban and clonal trees are vulnerable |
| 46:35 | Natural enemies of the oakworm |
| 47:56 | Control decisions: damage thresholds and Btk |
| 49:19 | Presentation wrap-up and key takeaways |
| 50:01 | Moderator comments on CMBS expansion in Georgia |
---