emerald Ash borer injections in La Vista

Yard Boss provides professional Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) treatment using trunk injection methodology. Our service protects ash trees from this devastating invasive pest that has killed tens of millions of trees across North America.

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Top-Notch Tree Care

Direct Delivery

Systemic Protection

Long-Lasting Results

Minimal Environmental Impact

Effective Timing

Emerald Ash Borer Injections

Starting at

$139

per Tree

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Top-Notch Tree Care

emerald ash borer injections

Starting at

$139

per Tree

Direct Delivery

YardBoss Black Checkmark

Systemic Protection

YardBoss Black Checkmark

Long-Lasting Results

YardBoss Black Checkmark

Minimal Environmental Impact

YardBoss Black Checkmark

Effective Timing

YardBoss Black Checkmark

Protecting La Vista's Urban Canopy from EAB

La Vista features beautiful tree-lined neighborhoods with valuable ash trees that face a critical threat from the Emerald Ash Borer (EAB). Our professional trunk injection service protects these trees using insecticide applied every other year during the growing season. EAB is already established throughout the Omaha metropolitan area, and La Vista ash trees are at immediate risk. Without treatment, 99% of ash trees die within 2-4 years of infestation, so it is not a question of if your trees will be affected, but when. Fortunately, professional trunk injection is highly effective when started preventatively before any visible symptoms appear.

La Vista Treatment Decision Timeline

La Vista residents should act now because preventative treatment has a success rate of over 90%, while late-stage treatment often fails. The progression from healthy to dead can happen in as little as 2-3 years, and symptoms usually lag behind the actual damage. During a free estimate, we identify ash trees by their opposite branching, compound leaves, and diamond-patterned bark. Treating a tree is a smart economic choice because it costs far less than tree removal, which can cost up to $3,000. Ongoing bi-annual treatment combined with deep root fertilization is the only way to keep your ash trees alive.

The EAB Lifecycle and Destruction Process

Understanding how EAB operates helps La Vista homeowners see why immediate treatment is necessary for tree survival. Adult beetles lay eggs in bark crevices, and once they hatch, tiny larvae bore into the tree to feed on the vascular tissue. These larvae spend months creating serpentine tunnels just under the bark, which systematically destroys the tree’s circulatory system. Each generation causes exponential damage, and one infested tree can produce thousands of beetles that spread to neighboring trees. Eventually, the vascular damage accumulates until the tree can no longer move water and nutrients, causing branch dieback and death.

When to treat

Ideal – Early season

April – June

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Tree Activity

Trees leafing out, high sap flow

Good – peak season

July – August

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Tree Activity

Full leaf, active growth

acceptable – late season

September

GreenCheckmark

Tree Activity

Still active but slowing down

Not available

October – March

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Tree Activity

Dormant, not transporting nutrients

call us today to schedule your service

Why Trunk Injection Outperforms Other Methods

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Trunk injection reliably delivers insecticide throughout the tree’s vascular system where the larvae feed, unlike surface sprays or soil treatments which cannot reach under the bark. Our process involves placing injection sites every 4 inches around the base and delivering insecticide directly into the tissue. The tree’s natural sap flow distributes the medicine from the roots to the canopy for complete internal protection. When larvae attempt to feed on treated tissue, they ingest the insecticide and die before causing significant damage. Treatment must occur between April and September while trees are actively transporting water.

Our Frequently Asked Questions

At Yard Boss, we understand that you may have questions about our services, processes, and how we can help you achieve the perfect lawn.  Whether you’re curious about our lawn care techniques, service areas, or the benefits of professional lawn maintenance, you’ll find the information you need right here. If you have any additional questions, feel free to reach out to our friendly team!

When started preventatively or at early stages of infestation, treatment is highly effective (90%+ success rate). However, we cannot guarantee results because:

  • Infestation severity varies (hidden damage may be more extensive than visible)
  • Tree health and vigor affect recovery ability
  • Environmental stresses (drought, disease) can impact outcomes
  • Treatment timing matters (earlier is better)


What we DO guarantee is that we use professional-grade products, proper application methods, and will honestly assess whether your tree is a good candidate for treatment.

No, the injections do not harm healthy trees. The process is very similar to getting a flu shot at the doctor's office:

  • We use a small needle (about the size of a needle used to draw blood)
  • The needle is carefully inserted into the trunk every 4 inches around the base
  • The injection sites are small and heal quickly
  • The tree naturally compartmentalizes these small wounds as part of its healing response
  • The benefit of EAB protection far outweighs the minimal stress of injection


Think of it this way:
A small injection is a minor stress compared to the certain death from EAB infestation.

Unfortunately, yes. The Emerald Ash Borer has shown no signs of naturally disappearing or "moving on" in any region where it has established. As long as you want to keep your ash trees alive, they will need treatment every other year.

The good news is that bi-annual treatment (every 2 years) provides effective protection when maintained on schedule.

No, EAB will not go away. Complete eradication would require treating every single ash tree, which is impossible because of:

  • Millions of ash trees in forests, parks, and natural areas
  • Trees on unmaintained properties
  • Trees along waterways and in protected conservation areas
  • Cost and logistics of treating every tree


EAB has permanently established itself in North America. The only way to save your ash trees is ongoing treatment.

The Emerald Ash Borer originated in Asia (specifically China, Korea, Japan, and eastern Russia). It accidentally arrived in North America in the late 1990s, hidden in wooden shipping materials (likely pallets or crating) delivered to the Great Lakes region. It was first discovered in Detroit, Michigan in 2002.

Since then, EAB has spread to most of the United States and Canada, killing all untreated ash trees in its path. It spreads through:

  • Natural flight (beetles fly 1-3 miles per year)
  • Human transport of infested firewood, nursery stock, and wood products
  • Movement of infested ash logs and lumber

Simply put, untreated ash trees will die. It's not a question of "if" but "when."

Timeline of an Untreated Ash Tree:

  • Year 1: EAB infestation begins (often no visible symptoms)
  • Year 2: Canopy thinning, epicormic shoots, possible woodpecker damage
  • Year 3-4: Severe decline, 50%+ canopy loss, extensive dieback
  • Year 4-5: Tree death

Death may take several years, but it is inevitable. The mortality rate for untreated ash trees is 99%+.

Additional consequences of tree death:

  • Loss of property value (mature trees add significant value)
  • Removal costs ($500-$3,000+ per tree depending on size and location)
  • Replacement costs (decades to grow a new mature tree)
  • Loss of shade, privacy, and aesthetic value
  • Safety hazard (dead trees can drop limbs or fall)

NOW. Do not wait until you see symptoms.

Critical Timing Information:

  • By the time you notice EAB damage, the tree is already heavily infested
  • Once visible symptoms appear, it may be too late to save the tree
  • Preventative treatment is FAR more effective than reactive treatment
  • The cost of treatment is a fraction of the cost of tree removal and replacement


Treatment is most successful when started:

  • Before any symptoms appear (preventative protection)
  • At first signs of thinning canopy (early intervention)

Treatment is often unsuccessful when:

  • Tree has 50%+ canopy loss
  • Extensive woodpecker damage present
  • Overall severe decline visible

It depends on the severity of infestation:

  • Early symptoms (light canopy thinning, few exit holes): Yes, treatment can still be effective
  • Moderate symptoms (30-50% canopy loss, visible damage): Treatment may help but success is not guaranteed
  • Severe symptoms (50%+ canopy loss, extensive dieback): We will NOT treat these trees—they should be removed


We'll honestly assess each tree during the estimate and only recommend treatment for trees that have a good chance of survival.