The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Woman saves 200- year- old elm

Tree with Dutch elm disease will be treated, not felled, thanks to her.

- By Greg Stanley

MINNEAPOLI­S — A 200- year- old American elm tree stood condemned, finally succumbing, it seemed, to the disease that has killed off hundreds of thousands of other elms in Minnesota.

The tree, one of the few old elms left in the Twin Cities, towered over a small channel of Minneapoli­s’ Lake of the Isles long before Minnesota was a state. Somehow it survived untreated as Dutch elm disease spread over the last 50 years from neighborho­od to neighborho­od. Its trunk, wide enough to walk through, bent into an oval as it grew and squeezed between a sidewalk and two- lane road built around it.

But, at last, foresters found Dutch elm disease – a fatal fungal infection spread by beetles – in the tree this fall. They planned to cut it down Oct. 1.

Then Kyla Wahlstrom stepped in.

Wahlstrom, who’s l ived i n the neighborho­od for 42 years, saw the spray- painted red stripe around the trunk — the telltale marking of a tree destined to be cut down — while walking her 11- month- old retriever. She had lost some of her own trees to the disease but none this tall, this old or this remarkable.

With a circumfere­nce of 16 feet, the elm was likely 195 to 225 years old, Wahlstrom estimated.

“Think of all the things it’s seen and lived through,” Wahlstrom said. “All the hard winters and droughts. It was here when Minnesota was just a territory.”

Wahlstrom, a retired professor at the University of Minnesota, said she learned long ago

not to take things at face value. If the tree was to be cut down, she wanted to know exactly why there was no other option.

She talked to the city foresters who found the disease, then to several other profession­als and experts. She learned that, although the disease is a certain death sentence when it makes it to a tree’s roots or main trunk, the tree can survive if the infection is only within its branches.

Wahl st rom had the tree retested. Sure enough, the disease had not yet spread to the trunk.

Support grew in the neighborho­od to save it.

Xandra Coe, who lives right next to the elm, offered to pay for regular pesticide treatments that will keep beetles and disease from coming back. City foresters approved the treatment plan and agreed to prune the infected branches.

They sprayed over the red stripe with black, unmarking it. The tree that has already survived so much will continue to live.

That’s hopeful news to Ben Held and Ryan Murphy, researcher­s at the University of Minnesota who are working to breed elms resistant to the disease. They noted that the old ones that have fought off or survived Dutch elm disease this long are particular­ly important to keep around.

“It’s prett y rare to find the large old ones,” Murphy said. “Those are the ones that are giving us the biggest benefits.”

Held and Murphy work with the university’s Minnesota Invasive Terrestria­l Plants and Pests Center to try to find out why some elms have proved to be more resistant to the disease. The hope i s that by breeding them together over generation­s they’ll be able to create strands of elm that can survive as long as the one Wahlstrom saved.

What made Dutch elm disease so devastatin­g is how popular elms have always been. They grow fast and tall, are extremely durable and open up into large canopies providing great shade and fall colors. By the 1970s, when t he di sease made i t to St. Paul, about 95% of the trees some cities planted in boulevards and rights of way were elm trees. In the early 1970s, the seven- county metro area lost tens of thousands of elms a year. The peak of the spread was 1977, when the metro lost more than 190,000 elms. The entire state has lost an estimated 140 million trees to the disease.

Fortunatel­y, elms grow fast enough that they have never been at risk of extinction. They still make up about 5% of the canopy on many boulevards in the state, Murphy said.

 ?? DAVID JOLES/ STAR TRIBUNE ( MINNEAPOLI­S) ?? Kyla Wahlstrom led the fight to save the giant elm she has long admired while on walks in her Minneapoli­s neighborho­od. Wahlstrom said she learned long ago not to take things at face value. If the tree was to be cut down, she wanted to know exactly why there was no other option.
DAVID JOLES/ STAR TRIBUNE ( MINNEAPOLI­S) Kyla Wahlstrom led the fight to save the giant elm she has long admired while on walks in her Minneapoli­s neighborho­od. Wahlstrom said she learned long ago not to take things at face value. If the tree was to be cut down, she wanted to know exactly why there was no other option.

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