'City of Stately Elms' working on a fix for Dutch elm disease - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 06:12 PM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

'City of Stately Elms' working on a fix for Dutch elm disease

Tree experts will be injecting 90 elms in Fredericton this year with spores that carry Dutch elm disease in the hope of creating disease-resistant trees.

There is hope that within the next couple of years there will be a strain of disease-resistant elm trees

Dutch elm disease spores are injected as part of a research project. (CBC)

In an area once known for its canopy ofelm trees,Dale Simpsonpresses a needle into a small, drilledhole in the crutch of a skinny white elm tree.

He is injecting it with spores that carry Dutch elm disease, which ravagedthe elm tree population throughout North America.

Simpson, themanager of the National Tree Seed Centre in Fredericton, will inject 90 trees this springand then watch closely over the next couple of months for signs of the disease.

Simpson said he hopes within a couple ofyearsthere will be disease-resistant elm trees.

"That would provide twooptions:leave the ones that are tolerant to the diseaseto produce seed, or go back to these trees and collect cuttings and use those cuttings to produce stock that could be used for planting around the city or elsewhere," said Simpson.

"If the tree still survives, that's great. If it doesn't, then it doesn't have any inherent resistance or tolerance to the disease."
Dale Simpson, manager of the National Tree Seed Centre in Fredericton, will inject 90 trees this season in a bid to figure out how to create disease-resistant elm trees. (CBC)

So far, Simpsonhas seen some of the young trees develop the disease, turning the leaves yellow andthen black. But the disease seems to be contained to the injected branch. Other treeshaven't shown any ill effects.

"Worst-case scenario, the whole tree will be dead. I haven't killed a whole tree yet," he said.

The trees are part of a project that began 15 years ago when the Atlantic Forestry Centre took cuttings from elm treesthat Simpson calls "flukes."

These areelm trees that survived the ravages of the disease that was first spotted in the province in 1957. The cuttings were grafted ontoseedlings, creating 150 new trees.

Dutch elm disease is carried by the native elm bark beetle. The beetleslook for dying or dead trees, tunnel under the outer bark, breedand then carry the spores to healthy trees, thereby infecting them.

The fungus can also travel roottoroot.

Trying to control the disease has meant cutting down any elm trees that appear infected.

First spotted in 1961

The disease was first spotted in Fredericton in 1961 in just twotrees, but by1990, more than13,000 trees were cut down to prevent its spread, according to a 1993 Natural Resources Canada report.

In 2006, the city reduced the area it policed to a more manageable area, removing about 150 trees a year, while at the same time planting Valley Forge elms, because they are "disease tolerant."

Unfortunately,they weren't weather tolerant, according to Neil Trebble,Fredericton's arboricultural foreman.

He said the Valley Forge trees' "structure wasn't great" and they tended tobreakapart in high winds.

More recently, the city has started planting Princeton elms, hoping they will fare better.

So what does it matter if Simpson's experiment provideslocal root stock?

"It matters considerably,"says Neil Trebble.

"It would be amazing if we had a tree that was grown here in Fredericton that was disease resistant," because atree used to the weather events in the area is much more likely to surviveand thrive.