TAMPA, Fla. – Critical drought conditions in the Southeast are killing trees, leaving them so brittle their limbs snap or so frail they become easy prey for fungi and insects. The impact of the drought has Florida forestry officials estimating that as many as 4 million trees will be affected this year, according to the Associated Press. The drought will likely affect the price of nursery stock from the region. With normal rainfall, about 1 million trees die of disease and natural causes in the state annually.
The primary culprit in the demise of drought-affected trees in the Southeast is the southern pine beetle, which becomes more active in dry weather and is ravaging trees in Georgia, Florida and Alabama (for more information about the beetle’s thriving population in Alabama, see the sidebar below).
"I'm professionally, totally depressed," said Bob Der, of the Hillsborough County Cooperative Extension Service in west central Florida. "I've been a forester here for more than 20 years, and I've been in forestry for 34, and I've never seen anything quite this bad."
Healthy trees can fight infection – sap from a strong trunk can wash beetles away before they bore too deep. Hypoxylon canker, a contagious fungus that eats through bark, can lie dormant inside a tree for years.
"I make my money saving trees and doing sick tree diagnoses, and it breaks my heart to see this," said arborist Loren Westenberger. "The only treatment is a chain saw."
Forestry officials fear the hordes of beetles will invade healthy trees once they have finished with the weak ones. "Once they reach that level, it's like a forest fire. They move from tree to tree," said Ed Barnard, a forest pathologist with the forestry service.
The unstable, diseased trees pose a danger to houses, power lines and people. Jack Duncan, a University of Alabama maintenance worker, narrowly escaped a 40-foot limb that snapped off a tree. "I heard a popping noise and knew something was happening," Duncan said. "I just didn't know what direction it was coming from."
Storms could help relieve the drought but they would create another problem, forestry officials said. Even in less severe storms, the parched trees are likely to drop many branches.
In Baton Rouge, La., a storm in July with 31-mph winds snapped so many trees and branches it looked as if a hurricane had swept through, said Eddie LeBlanc, a tree maintenance company operator.
"Trees are in a critical state," said Randy Harris, assistant director of the Baton Rouge city-parish Department of Landscape and Forestry.
Louisiana in general has more old trees than most states, making its forests more vulnerable, said Bonnie Stine, head of the urban forestry program in the state Department of Agriculture and Forestry. About the only thing landowners can do is aerate the soil, water deeply, have a specialist remove any dead branches, and leave fertilizer alone, she said.
| Pine Beetle Battle: Million-Dollar Boost Promises To Help Squash Pest |
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08/26/00 – by Jeff Amy, capital bureau writer for the Alabama Mobile Register MONTGOMERY – Alabama has received more than $1 million from the federal government and is in line for another $1 million to fight an attack of southern pine beetles brought on by the prolonged drought across much of the state. The Alabama Forestry Commission estimates the infestations have harmed 944,679 trees statewide, wiping out $113 million worth of timber. "This is the worst Southern pine beetle epidemic in Alabama history," State Forester Tim Boyce said in a statement. The beetles, which bore under the bark of certain types of pine trees, weaken trees by feeding off them. But tree deaths are usually caused by a fungus that follows the beetle. In July, the U.S. Forest Service allocated $750,000 to help eradicate the insects in Alabama's four national forests. The service also sent $300,000 to the Alabama Forestry Commission to fight the bug on state and private lands. Alabama national forests appear likely to get another $1.04 million soon from Washington. The state's congressional delegation sent a letter to U.S. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman on July 13 urging him to move up to $2 million into an account that pays for fighting threats to forest health. That move came after Gov. Don Siegelman asked the federal officials to seek more money. Jeff Emerson, spokesman for U.S. Rep. Spencer Bachus, R-Birmingham, said a request for $1.3 million is on Glickman's desk, and that he can shift such funds without congressional action. Jim Gooder, who supervises Alabama's four forests, said the state will get 80 percent of the total. The money will fund the program after Sept. 30, when funds would have run out. Bruce Kinzel, an Atlanta-based Forest Service spokesman, said this was the first time extra money has been shifted to fight the pine beetle. "That won't solve the problem," Gooder said. "What it does is allow us to continue our Southern pine beetle eradication efforts for next year." Infestations in timberlands are usually controlled by creating buffers – cutting down all the trees attacked plus a surrounding layer of healthy pines. Infestations on residential property can sometimes be suppressed with insecticide, if caught early enough. As of Aug. 18, 2000, the Alabama Forestry Commission officials said that 59 counties had epidemic infestations, and 65 of 67 counties had some beetle activity. Every county in South Alabama was suffering from epidemic conditions except Mobile and Baldwin. Those two counties usually escape pine beetle emergencies because of high number of longleaf pines, which are more resistant to pests than loblolly and slash pines. Above article ©2000 and reprinted from the Alabama Mobile Register (www.al.com). |
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