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Beetle Busters: A Rogue Insect and the People Who Track It
Beetle Busters: A Rogue Insect and the People Who Track It
Beetle Busters: A Rogue Insect and the People Who Track It
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Beetle Busters: A Rogue Insect and the People Who Track It

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A photographic study of“the frightening potential [of Asian longhorned beetles] to eat their way through North American forests . . . a call to action.”—School Library Journal (starred review)

The Asian longhorned beetle (ALB) has made news across the United States. These beetles came to America from China, living in wood turned into shipping material. At first the beetles invaded urban areas, where hardwood trees were in limited supply. Chicago was able to declare itself ALB-free in 2006. But right now, there is bad news in Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, and Toronto. Infestations have erupted in the areas’ hardwood forests, and these beetles, while bad at flying, are very good at killing trees.

Clint McFarland’s job? Stop the ALB at any cost. How do you balance the needs of residents, the impact to the environment, and an invasive species primed to wipe out entire forests? It takes the help of everyday people, such as children playing baseball at a playground, teams of beetle-sniffing dogs, and science-minded people (bug scientists and tree doctors) to eradicate this invasive pest.

“A splendid example of science controversy in everyday life.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“This fascinating, timely book might just change the way readers look at insects and trees for good.”—Booklist (starred review)

“A fascinating look at the origins of an invasive species and efforts to combat the damage it causes.”—Publishers Weekly

“The subject and the youth of many of the participants give this title an immediacy unusual even in this excellent series, bridging the gap between scientist and reader in a way that invites kids into the process.”—Bulletin

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 7, 2014
ISBN9780544601994
Beetle Busters: A Rogue Insect and the People Who Track It
Author

Loree Griffin Burns

LOREE GRIFFIN BURNS, Ph.D., did her doctoral at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. The author of Beetle Busters, Tracking Trash, and The Hive Detectives, she is an award-winning writer whose books for young people have won many accolades, including ALA Notable designations, a Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor Book Award, an IRA Children’s Book Award, a Green Earth Book Award and two Science Books & Films (SB&F) Prizes. Loree holds a Ph.D. in biochemistry and her books draw heavily on both her passion for science and nature and her experiences as a working scientist. She lives with her husband and their three kids in a farmhouse in central New England, where she gardens, keeps chickens, and writes about science and scientists. She likes to think that one day she’ll fill the big old barn on their property with horses. Learn more about Loree at loreegriffinburns.com and follow her on Twitter @loreegburns.

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    A fascinating, engaging look at scientists and citizen volunteers dealing with an invasive species.

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Beetle Busters - Loree Griffin Burns

Copyright © 2014 by Loree Griffin Burns

Photographs copyright © 2014 by Ellen Harasimowicz

All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to [email protected] or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.

hmhco.com

Tree and forest illustrations by Rachel Newborn

Cover design by Cara Llewellyn

All images by Ellen Harasimowicz with the exception of those on the following pages: 8: U.S. Forest Service, Northeastern Area, State and Private Forestry // 18, left: Dennis Haugen, USDA Forest Service // 18, bottom right: Stephen Lavallee, Courtesy USDA/APHIS // 19, 26: Courtesy USDA/APHIS // 22–23: Mike Bohne/U.S. Forest Service // 24: University of Vermont, Entomology Research Laboratory // 35–36, 38–39: Kevin Dodds/U.S. Forest Service // 44: © 2011 Canadian Science Publishing. Reproduced with permission from Dodds and Orwig. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 41: 1–14. // 58: Loree Griffin Burns

The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:

Burns, Loree Griffin. Beetle busters : a rogue insect and the people who track it / Loree Griffin Burns ; photographs by Ellen Harasimowicz. pages cm. (Scientists in the field) Audience: Ages 1–14. Audience: Grade 7 to 8. 1. Asian longhorned beetle—Juvenile literature. 2. Beetles—Juvenile literature. I. Harasimowicz, Ellen, photographer. II. Title. SB945.A83B87 2014 595.76'48dc23 2013050160

ISBN 978-0-547-79267-5 hardcover

ISBN 978-1-328-89572-1 paperback

eISBN 978-0-544-60199-4

v1.0718

For Ed Schroth, Clint McFarland, Bruce Palmer, and Ryan Zumpano, four men I admire—L.G.B.

For my boys, Jeff, Craig, and Reed—E.H.

The Cut

Ryan Zumpano has seen a lot of neat things in the woods: turtles, snakes, woodpeckers as big as cats. Among the neatest, though, was a certain pair of common white-tailed deer. He and a friend were walking in the woods near an old landfill in their hometown, exploring. The two boys and the two deer were within six feet of one another before either pair realized the others were there. All four animals stopped.

The boys stared.

The deer moved their noses, searching for a scent.

At some mysterious signal—the boys didn’t see or hear it—the deer exploded into action. The larger one made a massive leap for the woods, covering a distance of twelve feet or more in a single leap. And as it did, it made a spectacular noise: a sharp, rushing vocalization probably meant to scare the boys.

It was the loudest, coolest noise I’ve ever heard, Ryan says.

When you spend time in the woods, these sorts of experiences just happen. That’s why Ryan spends so much time there.

He remembers his worst day in these woods just as vividly. It happened years ago, but he’s still not over it. He was hanging out with another friend near the same spot where he’d seen the deer.

We came down after school, Ryan remembers. "We walked the same route we always do, a path through thick woods. There were trees on both sides of us, as usual. But at a certain place, they stopped. The trees stopped. They were gone."

The boys stood in the woods that they knew better than anyone else around and tried to understand what they were seeing. Who would cut down their trees?

We had no idea what to do. We took pictures with our phones. We tried to figure out what was happening.

The boys eventually found a sign posted at the place where the woods used to meet a main road into the center of town. The sign explained that part of the forest was being cut because of a beetle. They took more pictures and sent all of them to their science teacher. Mr. Palmer ran the Biodiversity Club at Ryan’s school, and he’d grown up exploring these same woods. He’d taught Ryan and the other members of the club everything they knew about birding, tracking animals, identifying trees, and working in the woods as naturalists. In fact, it was Mr. Palmer who had introduced Ryan to this particular patch of forest.

My first reaction, Mr. Palmer remembers, was the same as Ryan’s: heartbreak.

Although Mr. Palmer understood what Ryan was feeling, not many others did. Sure, people felt bad that Ryan was so upset, but they didn’t really feel for the trees.

"They’d say, ‘Sorry to

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