Black walnuts in peril of canker disease
By Steven Olson
North Forty News
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The mountain pine beetle has everyone worried about their pine trees,
but there are other bugs out there just as dangerous. The walnut twig beetle
is one.
The beetle is an Arizona native, feasting on the Arizona walnut straddling
the border between Arizona and New Mexico. It didn't do a lot of damage
there because the trees were better able to resist their attacks.
Then the beetles came north and jumped to the black walnut, a native of
the eastern United States that was planted in urban areas all along the
Front Range because it's an attractive shade tree. It grows fairly slowly,
can reach 40 feet in height and has a nice shape. The wood is pretty, somewhat
durable and can be worked easily.
Tim Buchanan, Fort Collins city forester, said he doesn't have an accurate
count of how many black walnut trees are in Fort Collins because the city
doesn't keep those kinds of records. He estimates somewhere between 400
and 1,000 at the most.
The walnut twig beetle has the potential to change all of that, however.
Buchanan said people in Boulder started noticing their black walnut trees
dying in 2003. The tree would start "flagging," a word foresters use to
describe the leaves on branches turning yellow or branches dying outright.
"If you stood below the tree and looked up in the center you would see
all these dead branches," Buchanan said.
Things go downhill from there.
"Boulder and Colorado Springs lost a lot of them," said Dr. Ned Tisserat,
an Extension specialist and professor of plant pathology who studies 1,000
canker disease. "Boulder lost about 800 in the past four years."
At first, people thought the trees were just dying from the effects of
drought, then they realized that they were dealing with a disease. The
cause was a fungus carried by the walnut twig beetle.
"We just discovered it in the spring of last year," said Tisserat. "The
fungus is called Geosmithia."
Fungus-laden beetles burrow into the bark and get into the section of wood
that carries nutrients from the roots to the leaves. Then the fungus kills
a small area of wood in a formation called a canker. That wouldn't seem
so bad, except that there are millions of the bugs, all burrowing into
a tree, all carrying the fungus, all creating cankers. Eventually they
create so many that the fungus girdles the tree, and the tree starves to
death. That's where the disease gets its rather fanciful name--1,000 canker
disease. It's akin to the Chinese torture called the death of a thousand
cuts.
The beetles are really small and hard to detect. "The mountain pine beetle
is a real monster compared to this guy," Tisserat said. "You really have
to know where to look" on the tree to see if walnut twig beetles are in
the wood.
Another problem in detection is that the disease can take about two years
to kill a tree. "You can look at a tree and everything will look fine,"
Tisserat said. "But eventually the tree begins to collapse."
The disease has popped up in Colorado Springs, Boulder, Westminster and
Longmont. Tisserat has not seen any confirmed cases in Denver. Nor has
he seen any evidence the disease is in Loveland or Fort Collins, although
he is analyzing a tree on the Colorado State University campus that may
have it. Nevertheless, Tisserat thinks the disease will spread up and down
the entire Front Range.
What worries him and people like Buchanan is that the disease will spread
east of here into the black walnut's native range on the other side of
the Mississippi River.
"That's what people are really worried about," said Buchanan. "Currently
this thing is not in eastern North America. We're afraid somebody's going
to cut down a dead tree and not take the bark off the logs. So, if I had
to tell people something, it's 'Don't take the wood east, or don't ship
the wood to someplace like Indiana.'"
"If you cut it down, take the bark off the logs," said Tisserat. "And dry
the wood for about a year before you move it. We don't want this thing
to move off the Front Range."
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