Bangor Mail

THOUSANDS OF TREES TO BE CUT DOWN AMID DISEASE FEARS

Highly destructiv­e fungus found across North Wales

- Jez Hemming

TENS of thousands of trees could be lost in North Wales due to an outbreak of a “highly destructiv­e” fungal disease.

Chalara ash dieback has been found in various North Wales areas, leaving environmen­t watchdog Natural Resources Wales (NRW) with no alternativ­e than to fell around 2,800 ash trees.

Councils and landowners will also have to cull affected native ash trees blighted with the fungal infection which spreads when fungal spores are carried on the wind.

Chris D Jones, NRW’s senior specialist adviser in plant health said: “Ash trees are widespread in Wales, and are valuable for biodiversi­ty and timber. As the third most common tree in Britain, ash trees make a substantia­l contributi­on to many landscapes.

“Ash dieback is a highly destructiv­e disease of ash trees. Whilst the overall responsibi­lity for plant health lies with Welsh Government, we deal with ash dieback on land managed by NRW, as part of our tree safety obligation­s.

“In Conwy county, as in other counties, we have surveyed highrisk areas of our estate, and are managing this, usually by felling. In North Wales, we estimate we need to manage – which usually means felling – over 2,800 trees.”

Chalara ash dieback is caused by an Asian fungus first recorded in the UK in 2012. It blocks trees’ water systems and causes leaves to wilt, shoots to die back, lesions on branches and eventually the death of the tree.

Conwy County Council is looking to remove affected trees and is inspecting those on its land and next to highways. It has also called on landowners to check their ash population­s and consult profession­als if they believe there is a problem.

Landowners have a duty of care to check ash tree population­s, especially those near to paths or highways as they can shed limbs in their weakened state or fall completely – and records need to be kept of tree inspection­s.

The council says the problem will incur costs “likely to be far beyond our normal budgets”.

The latest infections have been called “the most significan­t tree disease to affect the UK since Dutch elm disease”, which decimated millions of UK elms from the late 1960s on.

The disease has the potential to infect the UK’s two billion ash trees leading to the death of approximat­ely 90% of them.

Infected trees become brittle as they decay and can fall without warning. The UK’s native common and European ash trees are the worst affected by chalara ash dieback. According to the latest map from the UK Government’s department for environmen­t, food and rural affairs (Defra), most coastal areas in North Wales are affected by the issue.

Woodlands within inland areas of Flintshire, Wrexham, Denbighshi­re, Conwy and Gwynedd are also tainted by the condition. The disease is now widespread in Flintshire where the council estimates there are around 12,000 ash trees above five feet tall adjacent to the county’s main road.

Gwynedd council has been conducting surveys near roads and on its land, including schools and cemeteries. A spokesman said:

“Ap p roximat e l y 15,000 trees were surveyed over a four month period and, of these, over 5,000 were identified as requiring attention, ranging from pruning to felling.”

In Wrexham the county council tendered for experts to check trees in January and estimates around 5% of them are ash in urban settings, as well as many more in rural areas.

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 ??  ?? A mature ash tree suffering dieback disease
A mature ash tree suffering dieback disease

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