By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - A species of beetle never before seen
in North America has been discovered in a Massachusetts
forest, but the Asian insect does not appear to pose an
ecological threat, experts said Monday.
Twenty-two beetles belonging to the Xyleborus
seriatus species of ambrosia beetle were found in April
in traps set by state forestry workers in Southborough,
about 25 miles west of Boston. Two or three more were
trapped in nearby Stow.
The insects were sent to Cornell University to be
studied.
They may have "hitchhiked" to the United States on
wooden crates shipped from Asia, Cornell entomologist
Richard Hoebeke said.
"My guess is that it has been around awhile and
simply gone undetected because nobody was looking for
it," said Hoebeke, who announced the finding in an
e-mail to colleagues on July 20.
Each year, a dozen species of insects on average are
discovered for the first time in the U.S., he said.
Some insects, such as the hemlock wooly adelgid,
emerald ash borer and Asian longhorn beetle, can wreak
havoc on wildlife habitat. However, most ambrosia
beetles feed on fungi in dead or dying trees, not
healthy ones.
"So far, it's not a cause for concern," said Glenn
Rosenholm, regional spokesman for the U.S. Forest
Service.
The new beetle is about three millimeters long and
has brown legs and wings. Scientists are thinking about
naming it the "Southborough beetle."
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2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
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