Climate Changed: How a shiny green beetle put a dent in Canada's urban forests

A green ribbon reading "Ash Tree at Risk" is tied around an ash tree in Omaha, Neb. Nebraska, Thursday, June 29, 2017. In the 20 years since the emerald ash borer was first detected in Canada, the centimetre-long insect has wiped out hundreds of thousands of ash trees, many of them in cities, where trees are heavy lifters in climate change adaptation, offering shade and lessening what's known as the "urban heat island" effect. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Nati Harnik

TORONTO - When Emma Hudgins was born, her parents planted an ash tree.

It's still standing 29 years later in New Maryland, N.B., but it's under threat from the emerald ash borer, a shiny green beetle that kills almost every ash tree it encounters.

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