120°W 80°W 60°W Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) Risk 2013 50°N 30°N 100°W 50°N Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire EAB Risk 2013 30°N Low Moderate Moderate High High Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) Risk 2013 EAB risk is a function of EAB detection likelihood, detection uncertainty, and potential introduction locations. Potential introduction locations include campgrounds,rest areas, and other locations identified by state cooperators. Introduction sites were given a high risk value and then combined with the 2013 EAB detection likelihood composite model. Risk values are classified into: Low, Moderate, Moderate High, and High classes. 100°W 0 50 100 200 300 400 500 Miles Albers Equal Area Conic Projection Map produced by FHTET, IL Fort Collins, CO on 11-16-2012 File: EAB_Risk_2013.mxd Project: EAB Risk Analysis 2013 80°W Summary of Emerald Ash Borer Risk Assessment 2013 Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire November 16, 2012 The Risk Assessment map for the Emerald Ash Borer (EAB), Agrilus planipennis, was produced for the Contiguous 48 U.S. (CONUS) at a 1 square kilometer (1 km2) resolution by the U.S. Forest Service, Forest Health Protection, Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team (FHTET) in collaboration with Animal and Plant Health Service, Plant Protection and Quarantine (APHIS PPQ) staff members. The intended use is to develop a risk based sample design for EAB that prioritizes detection and management activities in areas with the highest risk and uncertainty. The Risk Assessment was produced by combining 2002 to 2012 EAB Detection Likelihood and Uncertainty and 2012 Detection Likelihood and Uncertainty models (Downing et al. 2012) by taking the maximum value between the two models at each 1 km cell (Table 1). Potential introduction sites, including campgrounds, rest areas, and other sites identified by state cooperators, were given a high risk rating. The interim surface was masked using a Fraxinus species range map (Withrow 2010) to develop the final EAB Risk Assessment product. For display purposes and ease of interpretation risk values were partitioned into four classes of risk (Table 2). Pest information for EAB was taken from the Exotic Forest Pest (ExFor) website (http://foresthealth.fs.usda.gov/exfor). Table 1: Inputs used in A. planipennis Risk Assessment 2013 Inputs Description and Source Detection Detection likelihood surface developed using MaxEnt statistical technique for modeling species distributions Likelihood 2002 (FHTET 2012). Incorporates all known EAB positive locations reported by APHIS and state cooperators from to 2012 2002 to 2012. The 2002 to 2012 detection likelihood model puts more emphasis on previously known EAB infested areas. Detection Detection likelihood surface developed using MaxEnt statistical technique for modeling species distributions Likelihood 2012 (FHTET 2012). Incorporates all known EAB positive locations reported by APHIS and state cooperators for 2012 only. The 2012 detection likelihood model puts more emphasis on the frontier of the EAB expanding range. Detection Uncertainty 2002 to 2012 Detection Uncertainty 2012 Model uncertainty quantifies the variability of the 2002 to 2012 detection likelihood model runs by calculating the standard deviation of the detection likelihood values on a cell by cell basis. Campgrounds Compiled from Federal campgrounds (USDA APHIS PPQ 2009), U.S. MapData Landmark Points (ESRI 2010), a proprietary campground database acquired from Salesgenie (2010), and state cooperators. Rest Areas point locations were compiled from points of interest across the U.S. (POI Factory 2012 http://www.poi-factory.com/node/14656). U.S. Rest Areas Model uncertainty quantifies the variability of the 2012 detection likelihood model runs by calculating the standard deviation of the detection likelihood values on a cell by cell basis. Downing, M. C., I. I. F. Leinwand, P. H. Chaloux, J. R. Withrow, and F. J. Sapio. 2012. Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) “Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire Risk Assessment” U.S. Forest Service Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team (FHTET) Forest Health Protection USDA Forest Service, http://www.fs.fed.us/foresthealth/technology/invasives_agrilusplanipennis_riskmaps.shtml Withrow, J. 2010. Production of Urban Host Layers. Deliverable document prepared for USDA Forest Service, Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team (FHTET), Task Order No: AG-7604-D-09-0542. WAO No: FHTET-10-Pest-Host. Table 2: Risk Assessment classes Risk Value 0 to 0.05 0.05 to 0.25 0.25 to 0.50 0.50 to 1 Risk Class Low Moderate Moderate High High Contractor Support Ian Leinwand John Withrow Point of Contact Marla C. Downing Forest Health Technology Enterprise Team (FHTET), Forest Health Protection, USDA Forest Service 2150 Centre’ Ave., Bldg A, Suite 331 Fort Collins, CO 80526-8121 Phone: 970-295-5843 mdowning@fs.fed.us