Skip to content
HBES logo 1108x200px
  • About
    • About the Study
    • About the Forest
    • About Us
    • Code of Conduct
    • People
    • News
    • Events
    • Jobs & Opportunities
    • Contact Us & Visit
  • Research
    • General Research Overview
    • LTER
    • Conceptual Model
    • Guide for Researchers
    • Experimental Watersheds & Research Sites
    • Field Orientation Guides
    • Research Proposal Submission
  • Publications & Media
    • Publications
    • Online Book: A Synthesis of Scientific Research at Hubbard Brook
    • Public Reports and Fact Sheets
    • Newsletters
    • Multimedia Feature Stories
    • Photo Galleries
    • Videos
  • Data
    • Hubbard Brook Data Catalog
    • RealTimeData
    • Species Lists
    • Sample Archive
    • LTER Network Data Resources
    • Information Management
  • Education
    • Field Trips & Tours
    • Zoom-a-Scientist
    • K-12 Education Program
    • Undergraduate & Graduate Training
    • Online Book: A Synthesis of Research at Hubbard Brook
  • Science & Society
    • Art-Science
      • Visiting Artists
      • WaterViz
    • Young Voices of Science
    • Policy Briefings & Youth Climate Forums
    • Hubbard Brook Roundtables
    • Science Links
    • Partnerships & Citizen Science
    • Featured Speakers
    • Resolution Flowchart
  • Hubbard Brook
    Research Foundation
    • About HBRF
    • Staff
    • Trustees
    • Facilities
  • Visiting Artists

Support

New Hampshire Bulletin: What can the emerald ash borer reveal about the long-ago loss of American chestnut?

Posted on October 22, 2025

Home > News > New Hampshire Bulletin: What can the emerald ash borer reveal about the long-ago loss of American chestnut?

If the embed doesn’t render, open the article on New Hampshire Bulletin.

Posts Navigation

← New Hampshire Bulletin: New Hampshire’s snowpack is shrinking. Researchers are still uncovering the scope of what it means.

For Researchers

  • Guide for Researchers
  • Data Catalog
  • Research Sites
  • Publications
  • Personnel Directory

For Educators

  • About the Forest
  • K-12 Education Program
  • Undergraduate and Graduate Training
  • Field Trips & Tours
  • Online Book

For Friends

  • About HBRF
  • Featured Speakers & Zoom-a-Scientist
  • News
  • Events

Our work is supported by the National Science Foundation (DEB #8702331, #9211768, #9810221, #0423259, #1114804, 1637685, #2224545), the USDA Forest Service and other government and private funders. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, and recommendations in this web site are our own, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the funding organizations. The Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest is located on unceded Abenaki land in the southwestern part of the White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire.

lter sq logo white text 640x649px
NSF logo 200x200px footer
USFS logo 200x222px footer
HBRF Logo white text 200x364

© Copyright - Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study. Except where otherwise noted, material may be re-used under a Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0 license.