adelgid in English

noun
1
an insect of the family Adelgidae , which comprises sap-feeding hemipteran insects resembling aphids.

Use "adelgid" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "adelgid" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "adelgid", or refer to the context using the word "adelgid" in the English Dictionary.

1. Tree damaged by balsam woolly Adelgid infestation

2. Adelges tsugae (Hemlock Woolly Adelgid) - Fact Sheet

3. Hemlock woolly Adelgid "cottony" masses

4. NOTE: Many other things may look like hemlock woolly Adelgid

5. On-Line Information – NC State University CTN 20: Balsam Woolly Adelgid – fact sheet with

6. Hemlock woolly Adelgid is an aphid-like insect that attacks and kills hemlock trees

7. The hemlock woolly Adelgid is thought to have originated in Asia

8. The most common this year was the Cooley Spruce Gall Adelgid (Adelges coolyi (Gillette) Homoptera:Adelgidae))

9. Please review hemlock woolly Adelgid look alikes (printable PDF) before reporting

10. In the 1950s, a small organism appeared in Richmond, Virginia, called the Hemlock woolly adelgid.

11. The hemlock woolly Adelgid hatches from eggs into what is called the crawler stage

12. Hemlock wooly Adelgid are difficult to control because the fluffy secretions protect it from pesticides

13. A pest of hemlock trees, hemlock woolly Adelgid (HWA) is native to the Asian continent.

14. Hemlock woolly Adelgid is established in isolated locations in the western Lower Peninsula of Michigan

15. The potential of T. galchanoides for biological control of the hemlock woolly adelgid was discussed.

16. The hemlock woolly Adelgid (HWA) is a tiny insect that is closely related to the aphids

17. The hemlock woolly Adelgid, or HWA, is an invasive, aphid-like insect that attacks North American hemlocks

18. Hemlock woolly Adelgid was accidentally brought to eastern North America and is a threat to eastern hemlocks

19. An example is the Douglas fir Adelgid, which has generations that alternate between Douglas fir and Sitka spruce

20. The health of Maryland’s hemlocks, and the associated ecosystems, is being threatened by the hemlock woolly Adelgid (HWA)

21. Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (Uh-dell-jid) (HWA) is an introduced, aphid-like insect from Asia that attacks eastern hemlock

22. Eastern Spruce Gall Adelgid: Galls caused by this insect occur mostly on Norway, white, black, and red spruce trees

23. The guide is titled Integrating Chemical and Biological Control of the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid: A Resource Manager’s Guide

24. This Adelgid is a serious pest of spruce trees (Picea) and can damage Douglas Fir trees as well

25. Laricobius nigrinus is a small beetle that eats an even smaller bug – the hemlock woolly Adelgid, or HWA

26. “It can be a bit of a dicey distinction, but most people would talk of the hemlock woolly Adelgid as an

27. The hemlock woolly Adelgid (Adelges tsugae), commonly referred to as HWA, is an aphid-like insect native to East Asia

28. The hemlock woolly Adelgid is native to the northwestern United States, but has spread across areas of the northeast in recent years

29. Native to Asia, the hemlock woolly Adelgid, or HWA, is an invasive, aphid-like insect that attacks North American hemlocks

30. The Adelgid nymphs feed on the underside of the leaves, with each insect being hidden under a coating of white waxy filaments

31. As of May 2017, hemlock woolly Adelgid (also referred to as HWA) had been found in localized areas of Allegan, Muskegon, Oceana …

32. Woolly Adelgid: [noun] either of two aphids (genus Adelges) with a white woolly coating that have been accidentally introduced into North America:

33. The most obvious sign of a hemlock woolly Adelgid infestation is the copious masses of white filaments of wax produced by females (Fig

34. Meanings for Adelgid It is the name of small insects under the subdivision of Hemiptera predominately found in the northern hemisphere

35. 1939, Samuel Alexander Graham, Principles of Forest Entomology, page 315: For this reason, it is important that Adelgid-free planting stock be used

36. Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota have hemlock forests that are sufficiently separated from the Appalachians that it is unlikely the Adelgid could reach them through natural means.

37. The hemlock woolly Adelgid, Adelges tsugae, is a small (1 / 32 inch), reddish-purple, aphid-like insect that covers itself with a white, fluffy secretion

38. The hemlock woolly Adelgid, an insect that has decimated the eastern hemlock population over the last 40 years, is not a parasite — it’s an herbivore

39. Though balsam woolly Adelgid is not as much of a problem as it was in the past due to control of other pests, it can still damage and even kill trees

40. 2003, Timothy Silver, Mount Mitchell and the Black Mountains, page 238: Since the Adelgid did not attack red spruce or hardwoods, its impact on the timber industry would be

41. The hemlock woolly Adelgid, Adelges tsugae (HWA), a tiny sap-sucking insect related to aphids, is causing widespread death and decline of hemlock trees in the eastern United States

42. Hemlock woolly Adelgid (HWA) is an aphid-like insect (aphids suck fluid from plants) that attacks and kills hemlock trees by feeding on nutrient and water storage cells at the base of needles

43. WASHINGTON, D.C., April 14, 2020—A first-of-its-kind hybrid hemlock, which is not vulnerable to the insect hemlock woolly Adelgid, has been developed by the Agricultural Research Service's U.S

44. “The goal of the strategy is to prolong the health of some hemlock trees with insecticides, while, on other trees, establishing Adelgid-eating insects,” says Bud Mayfield , USDA Forest Service researcher and lead

45. The hemlock woolly Adelgid (HWA), Adelges tsugae, is a nonnative, invasive insect pest that colonizes, feeds on the sap of, and ultimately kills both eastern and Carolina hemlock trees, Tsuga canadensis and Tsuga caroliniana

46. In about 1900, a tiny insect called balsam woolly Adelgid (Adelges piceae), a European native, appeared in North America on balsam firs (Abies balsamea) in New England and Canada.In 1928 it was found for the first time in a western state, on ornamental firs near San Francisco.