DED Regulated Areas Expanded (BC and Saskatchewan)

What Has Changed?
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) has expanded the regulated areas for Dutch elm disease to include all of Saskatchewan and parts of south-central British Columbia (Kootenay region – near Castlegar) as of June 16, 2026.

This expansion is a response to recent detections of DED in Saskatoon (2025) and British Columbia (2024).

Why Is This Important for Alberta?
Alberta remains a DED - free province, and these new movement restrictions are specifically designed to protect Alberta’s trees and urban forests from the spread of this destructive disease.

The restrictions help prevent the movement of potentially infected elm wood, nursery stock, and bark beetles from newly regulated areas into Alberta.

Keep Calm and Carry-on
Municipalities, landscapers, and tree buyers in Alberta can be reassured that proactive steps are being taken to keep DED out of the province.  This includes the Clean Plants program, as well as firewood collection movement restrictions.

There may be increased public and media attention about DED, but the CFIA has provided clear contacts for information and support to reduce confusion or panic.

https://inspection.canada.ca/en/plant-health/invasive-species/plant-diseases/dutch-elm-disease

Alberta buyers should continue to source elm trees only from approved, DED-free suppliers and follow any updated guidance from the CFIA or provincial authorities.

Support and Communication
The CFIA encourages anyone with questions or concerns to reach out directly to their local inspection manager or use the provided contact information for technical support.

Ongoing updates and resources are available on the CFIA website to keep Alberta stakeholders informed or through StopDED (https://www.alberta.ca/society-to-prevent-dutch-elm-disease)

The expansion of regulated areas in Saskatchewan and BC is a precautionary measure to protect Alberta’s valuable elm trees and urban forests. Alberta residents and the horticultural industry should remain vigilant but reassured that strong safeguards are in place to prevent the introduction and spread of Dutch Elm Disease into the province.

Elm Zigzag Sawfly (Aproceros leucopoda)

The Elm Zigzag Sawfly is an invasive insect native to Asia that eats the leaves of elm trees. It is monitored by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) after being first discovered in North America in 2020. In 2025 it was found for the first time in Winnipeg.  It gets its name from the unique, back-and-forth pattern the larvae leave behind as they chew through the leaves.

https://inspection.canada.ca/en/plant-health/invasive-species/insects/elm-zigzag-sawfly/fact-sheet

CFIA Elm Zigzag Sawfly Reporting Page

More information on this pest can be found on the plant pest cards page. Cards can be printed for your convenience.

How to Identify It

  • Zigzag feeding pattern: Larvae carve a distinct "zigzag" trace between the leaf veins.
  • Larval stage: Tiny, legless, whitish or green caterpillars up to 8 mm in length.
  • Adult stage: Small, shiny black flying insects about 6 to 7 mm long with banded wings.
  • Cocoons: Found on the underside of leaves and enclosed in a loose, net-like mesh.

Impact on Trees

  • Feeds exclusively on elm tree species.
  • Can complete 3 to 4 generations per year, leading to rapid population growth.
  • Heavy infestations can cause severe defoliation, stressing the tree.
  • While it does not spread Dutch elm disease directly, stressed trees are much more vulnerable to the disease and other pests.

Where It Is Found

  • First discovered in Sainte-Martine, Quebec in 2020.
  • Has since spread into eastern Ontario, the Greater Toronto Area, and confirmed by CFIA in Winnipeg, Manitoba in 2025.
  • Also widespread in parts of the United States.

Prevention and control   https://inspection.canada.ca/en/plant-health/invasive-species/insects/elm-zigzag-sawfly/fact-sheet

  • Aproceros leucopoda is a strong flier and can disperse locally. It is known to move by human-assisted means via plants for planting and hitch-hiking. Cocoons can be found on twigs and leaves; larvae or pupae may be associated with roots and soil.
  • At this time, raising public awareness of the risk of moving infested elm material is essential to help control and limit the spread of A. leucopoda in Canada. Elm trees can be infested with all life stages of the sawfly. Maintaining tree vigour and health, and a diversity of tree species (that is, avoiding monocultures) is one of the best methods to reduce and control infestations of elm zigzag sawfly.

Reporting the Pest

  • If you suspect you have spotted the insect or its characteristic leaf damage and to help determine the extent of its distribution, the CFIA is encouraging the public and all stakeholders to submit samples of any suspect pests they observe on elm trees to their local CFIA office. Suspect sightings can also be reported to the CFIA Elm Zigzag Sawfly Reporting Page
  • This information will assist in evaluating the extent of the infested area and the threat posed by this pest and will help direct the next steps for Canada.

Check your elm trees for DED symptoms – Elm Submission Form

Dutch elm disease is becoming more of a concern in Alberta.  2025 Edmonton has had one elm tested positive for DED.  Elm surveys are being done throughout the city all season. It only takes one piece of DED infected elm wood to cause a problem.

If you see signs of DED in your elm tree – wilting leaves in summer, branch dieback, brown streaks under the bark, please contact the hotline number in your municipality or the STOPDED hotline.

https://www.alberta.ca/dutch-elm-disease-overview

 

Dutch elm disease (DED) Hot line numbers

  • City of Airdrie 403-200-2699
  • City of Beaumont 780-929-4300
  • City of Brooks - 403-501-8793
  • City of Calgary - 311
  • City of Camrose - 780-672 9195
  • City of Chestermere – 403-207-2807
  • City of Edmonton - 311
  • City of Fort Saskatchewan- 780-722-9739
  • City of Lacombe - 403-782-1297
  • City of Leduc – 780-980-7133
  • City of Lethbridge - 311
  • City of Lloydminster 780-205-4600
  • City of Medicine Hat – 403-529-8333  “Option 6”
  • City of Grande Prairie- 311
  • City of Red Deer – 403-342-8238
  • City of Spruce Grove - 780-962-7584
  • City of St. Albert – 780-459-1557
  • Town of Stony Plain – 780-963-2469
  • Strathcona County - 780-467-2211
  • STOPDED – 1-877-837-ELMS (3567)

Emerald ash borer

  • CFIA @ 1-800-442-2342
  • STOPDED – 1-877-837-ELMS (3567)

 

All elm trees showing DED symptoms must be tested in the lab using the following form.

https://www.alberta.ca/dutch-elm-disease-sampling-procedures

https://www.alberta.ca/system/files/custom_downloaded_images/af-aphl-lab-sample-submission-form.pdf

Samples must be sent to the lab by a Municipality, County, MD or Special Areas representative.

City addressing sixth case of Dutch elm disease confirmed in Edmonton

July 17, 2025

The City of Edmonton has confirmed an elm tree in the Alberta Avenue neighborhood has tested positive for Dutch elm disease (DED). This is the sixth tree confirmed to have Dutch elm disease since it was first discovered in Edmonton in August 2024.

The infected tree is located along the boulevard. It, as well as elm trees within 20 metres of the infected tree, will be removed promptly as part of ongoing efforts to contain the spread of the deadly fungal disease. Extensive additional testing of trees in the vicinity is underway.

“City arborists, urban foresters and the pest management team remain vigilant as we continue implementing the established Dutch elm disease management plan, including intensified surveillance of elm trees. This additional confirmed case does not change our approach as we continue assessments, removals and testing in coordination with the province and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency,” said Mark Beare, Director of Infrastructure Operations. “While any positive test is disappointing, we remain confident that this collaborative approach is helping to limit the spread of the disease.”

Prompt removal of infected trees, and elm trees in the immediate vicinity, is essential for the health and safety of Edmonton's urban forest, as elm trees constitute 22 per cent of our Open Space and Boulevard Tree Inventory, totaling approximately 90,000 elm trees. Dutch elm disease is a contagious fungal infection that poses a major risk to other elm trees in the vicinity. An ongoing diligent pruning program to remove the deadwood in elms is necessary to reduce the habitat of the beetles which may spread the fungus.

Disposal of all removed elms occurs at the Edmonton Waste Management Centre in accordance with special handling procedures. Enhanced monitoring and assessments of trees in a one-kilometre radius of the infected trees are in place.

The previous five positive cases of Dutch elm disease were located in the Killarney and Yellowhead Corridor East neighbourhoods. The sixth tree was identified as presenting signs of the disease by City crews while conducting a planned visual assessment of trees in the Alberta Avenue neighbourhood. Staff with the City’s Integrated Pest Management Lab submitted samples from the tree to the provincial lab for testing. A positive result was received from the Government of Alberta on July 16, 2025.

What residents can do

Containing the spread of Dutch elm disease is a community effort. There are three ways residents can help stop the spread of the disease:

1. Do not bring firewood from another jurisdiction.

○ Beetles that carry Dutch elm disease are most likely to be brought to Edmonton in firewood, so remember to always “burn it where you buy it.”

2. Remove bark beetle habitat.

○ Prune elm trees between October and March to remove dead, dying and diseased branches (video).

○ Provincial law and municipal bylaw require elm tree owners to prune dead and dying branches from October through March.

○ All elm wood must be disposed of immediately by burning, burying, chipping or disposal at the Edmonton Waste Management Centre.

○ Do not combine elm wood with food scraps or other collected waste.

3. If you see signs of Dutch elm disease, call 311.

Signs of Dutch elm disease:

○ Brown staining in the sapwood that can be seen by removing the bark of infected twigs.

○ From the latter half of June to the middle of July, the leaves on one or more branches may wilt, droop and curl. The leaves then turn brown and usually remain on the tree.

○ If the tree is infected later in the summer, the leaves will droop, turn yellow and drop prematurely. Late season infections are easily confused with normal seasonal changes.

○ Beetle emergence holes, the size of the diameter of a pencil lead, and/or sawdust on the bark, indicate burrowing beetles.

For more information: edmonton.ca/dutchelm

If you see signs of DED in other parts of the province, call the STOPDED hotline 1-877-837-ELMS (3567)

Acelepryn Minor Use Label Expansion for Box Tree Moth

PMRA has just accepted the registration of Acelepryn (a.i. chlorantraniliprole) on outdoor grown boxwood plants for control of Box Tree Moth (BTM) in Canada.

Please see the linked updated labels below. The labels on the Health Canada Label search app should be updated on the PMRA label search website sometime in the next few weeks; until then, the attached labels may be used for grower applications should they wish to make applications.

Please note, if making the drench application for control of Japanese Beetle larvae, the low rate will need to be used to ensure the maximum amount of active ingredient permitted per hectare per season is not exceeded. A notification article will be posted on the ONnursery blog in the coming days / weeks.

DED found in Edmonton 2024

In August of 2024, four trees in the Killarney and Yellowhead Corridor East neighbourhoods in the City Edmonton, were identified to be infected with Dutch elm disease (DED). Although it is not possible to determine how the disease arrived in Edmonton, DED is often brought to new regions through the transport of firewood or by importing infected elm trees. Three of the elm trees were city-owned, and one privately owned.

Sarah McPike, Biological Sciences Technician with the City of Edmonton and a Director of the Society to Prevent Dutch Elm Disease (STOPDED) spotted the initial suspect DED infected tree while driving through the neighborhood.  This tree was completely dead tree with a 55 cm DBH. Sarah observed the tree had peeling bark, with galleries, and numerous larvae and adults of banded elm bark beetle present.

Samples from this tree were submitted to the Alberta Plant Health Lab (APHL) also located in Edmonton. Since the tree sample was dry and dead no cultures were able to be recovered. Technically, the tree sample came back from the lab as negative for DED, but was strongly suspected that it actually died of DED infection. This tree is not included in the number of the 4 positive trees in Edmonton.

After an intense surveillance in the area 3 city owned trees along 127 Ave were sampled and tested positive.  They ranged from 15 and 25 cm DBH. Two of them were about 150 m from the initial tree, equidistant east and west from that tree. The third was about 100 m further west.

The fourth positive tree was found on private property 500 m to the northwest of the western-most positive tree on 128 Ave, and was about 35 cm DBH. A notice was sent to the property owner to remove and dispose of the infected tree. Removal was supervised by the City of Edmonton and CFIA staff.

The initial tree, as well as all the trees that tested positive for DED have been removed and disposed off as per the Provincial DED Prevention and Control Measures.  Any elms within 20 meters of these elms were also removed as a precaution against the disease having spread by root graft.

Surveillance and monitoring were intensified in the region of the positive trees.  There are approximately 50 or 60 city elm trees (all 15 - 25 cm DBH) between the positive trees. There are a total of approximately 175 elms on that 127 Ave boulevard. 30+ additional trees with wilt symptoms were submitted to the APHL and all came back negative. Trees with even minor symptoms have been placed on a watch list for continued surveillance.  Several trees with high levels of decline have been removed, even though they did not test positive.

All of the city elms on 127 Ave have been injected with TreeAzin to help combat European elm scale, which all of those trees had present.

It is important to note that all suspect DED elm trees, both public and private are the responsibility of the municipality to sample. Under the Alberta Agricultural Pests Act (APA) “Pest and Nuisance Control Regulation (PNCR)” the DED pathogen is a named declared pest. All municipalities, counties and MDs in the province of Alberta have the responsibility and authority to prevent and control DED under the APA. The APHL accepts samples only from municipalities, counties, MD’s ad Special Areas, not from the home owner or private pruning companies.

https://open.alberta.ca/publications/dutch-elm-disease-prevention-control-measures-responsibilities-authority-apa

Since all Provincial and Federal DED requirements have been followed Alberta is still considered DED free at this point. The City of Edmonton will be doing extensive surveillance for DED and monitoring for the elm bark beetles in the following years.