Why Are My Birch Trees Dying?

Birch trees are dying in cities throughout the Pacific Northwest. Due to increasingly hotter and drier summers, Birch trees, like many other trees in our community are stressed and weakened, leaving them susceptible to attack.

Bronze Birch Borer

Bronze birch borer (Agrilus anxius Gory) is a native wood-boring insect, but populations of the insect are intensifying because of the abundance of vulnerable, stressed birch trees in our communities.

Bronze Birch Borer (adult) Agrilus anxius
Photo by John .A. Davidson
Bronze Birch Borer (adult) Agrilus anxius
Photo by John .A. Davidson
Bronze Birch Borer larva(e) galleries 
Photo by USDA Forest Service - Coeur d'Alene Field Office
Bronze Birch Borer larva(e) galleries
Photo by USDA Forest Service – Coeur d’Alene Field Office
Bronze Birch Borer (adult) under the bark 
Photo by David G. Nielsen, The Ohio State University
Bronze Birch Borer (adult) under the bark
Photo by David G. Nielsen, The Ohio State University

Signs and Symptoms

  • D-shaped exit holes
  • Bleeds on the bark
  • Serpentine ridges (insect activity beneath bark)
  • Thinned foliage, branch dieback, or total loss of canopy
Paper Birch bleeding
Paper Birch bleeding
Paper Birch dieback
Paper Birch dieback
Bronze Birch Borer D-shaped exit holes on Paper Birch
Bronze Birch Borer D-shaped exit holes on Paper Birch

Resources

Dive deeper

Get Involved

Forest Health Watch – Birch Tree Health Watch, iNaturalist

Participate in monitoring birch tree dieback by sharing observations on iNaturalist.

Birch Tree Health Watch homepage image