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Ash trees cut in Mill Creek to stop infestation


Published: Sun, January 29, 2012 @ 12:08 a.m.

RELATED: Ash tree infestation | What to look for

By Elise Franco

efranco@vindy.com

Youngstown

Mill Creek MetroParks employees are working to alleviate potential danger of hundreds of trees infested by the emerald ash borer beetle.

Ellen Speicher, Metro-Parks assistant horticulture director, said crews began cutting infested ash trees in areas of the park that are highly visited by people, such as parking lots and pavilions, to protect visitors from falling trees.

She said they’ve already cut about 100 trees of all ages and sizes, and over the next three to four years, likely will cut 200 to 300 more that will die due to infestation.

The emerald ash borer is a beetle native to Asia that was discovered several years ago in Michigan. The beetle bores into the tree, and its larvae tunnel into the inner bark, making it unable to transport water and nutrients, Speicher said.

“Last year, they definitely reached this area, and we’ve found multiple infested areas in the park,” she said. “We’ll be faced with hundreds of dying ash trees over the next several years.”

Speicher said once a tree is infested, it will live another three to four more years. It’s for this reason that she said MetroParks crews are taking down doomed trees in highly populated areas.

“There are several thousand ash trees on our grounds, so we won’t take them all,” she said. “We’ve surveyed the park and prioritized the trees that are most hazardous.”

Linda Kostka, MetroParks marketing and development director, said this species of borer can harm only the ash tree and likened the infestation to Dutch elm disease, which was a fungus spread throughout the 20th century to elm trees by beetles that carry the fungus or by a connection of infected tree roots with healthy ones.

“It’s just sad to see a whole species of tree disappear and be wiped out,” Kostka said.

Kostka said public safety is in mind when cutting these ash trees because the infested trees eventually will die and fall.

“These trees will die and could come down in a storm or something,” she said. “We don’t want anybody hurt.”

Speicher said there is a way to treat healthy trees as a preventive measure, but even that isn’t a guarantee.

She said the park chose to treat 10 trees inside the MetroParks that hold significant meaning: two blue ash trees inside Fellows Riverside Gardens, two pumpkin ash trees in the Wildlife Sanctuary, one ash in the sanctuary that’s home to a bald eagle’s nest, one at Ford Nature Center used for educational purposes and several in the Bear’s Den picnic area.

Speicher said crews will replace the removed ash trees with other species.

“We will replant other trees because in a natural area, when trees are removed, it opens the area to attack from invasive plant species,” she said. “We’re constantly planting throughout the year.”

Speicher said the borer is currently in 14 states, including Ohio, Pennsylvania, Indiana and Michigan. She said in any given infested area only about 3 percent to 5 percent of ash trees will survive.

“I never expected to live through a tree species’ dying out like this,” she said. “Five percent is low, but I hope even that few survive.”


Comments

1Bigben(800 comments)posted 3 weeks, 2 days ago

Thanks Free Trade. Sad thing is at this point they might as well just stop cutting and allow the trees to take a shot at it .They are going to be eradicated by cutting any way.Just cut the ones that are infested and leave the rest alone. The cutting them all down thus far hasn't worked to my knowledge anywhere it has been practiced.The evidence is it has spread from other states that cut them all down.

Suggest removal:

2Bigben(800 comments)posted 3 weeks, 2 days ago

After a reread I see they won't be cutting them all.

I hope they will be replanting native species to Ohio and not ornamental s that do nothing for wildlife and look out of place.Replant native trees.We don't need any more non native pests.

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3kishla25(1 comment)posted 3 weeks, 2 days ago

Thank-You Ellen and all the park crew for keeping the public safe.

Suggest removal:

4Bigben(800 comments)posted 3 weeks, 2 days ago

Plant native trees.

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5Bigben(800 comments)posted 3 weeks ago

"Thank-You Ellen and all the park crew for keeping the public safe." - - -Your probably Ellen.Ellen if that is who you are I am sure the park worries more about being sued then our well being. The park doesn't seem to care about what citizens want.Just look what is going on with the golf course butchering a beautiful course for the sake of dollars.They chopped down pines that weren't a problem ( said they were diseased) and chopped the hard woods too along Golf Drive.

For crying out loud it is bad enough we are loosing our ash trees from a foreign pest - so plant native Ohio trees correct for our local.They will thrive better in their native habitat, they won't have foreign pests , and the animals will recognize them as a nut or fruit producing tree. A win -win for all.

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