Scottish Daily Mail

Alarm over air pollution that’s killing off our trees

- By Colin Fernandez Science Correspond­ent

‘ALARMING’ levels of disease in British trees are being caused by air pollution, a study has found.

Trees across the country and europe have recently shown signs of illness – including discoloure­d leaves and sparse growth of leaves.

Now it has been found that the culprit is air pollution – causing ‘malnutriti­on’ in trees by harming beneficial fungi in the roots.

The roots rely on the mycorrhiza­l fungi to extract soil nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium. in return the roots pass carbon to the fungi, a mutually beneficial relationsh­ip crucial to the tree’s health.

But tougher fungi, which return fewer nutrients, now thrive instead – making the tree suffer from a lack of nutrition. as a result, researcher­s say legal limits on air pollution are set too high and need to be reduced.

researcher­s from imperial College and Kew Gardens studied 13,000 soil samples at 137 forest sites in 20 european countries.

The authors, writing in the journal Nature, said that recent studies recorded signs of tree malnutriti­on across europe.

Over ten years, they examined the funghi’s tolerance to pollution. Lead researcher Dr Martin Bidartondo, from the department of life sciences at imperial and Kew Gardens, said: ‘There is an alarming trend of tree malnutriti­on across europe, which leaves forests vulnerable to pests, disease and climate change. a major finding of the study is that european pollution limits may be set far too high.

‘in North america the limits are set much lower, and we now have good evidence they should be similar in europe.’

The team found that the characteri­stics of the tree and the local environmen­tal conditions were the most important predictors of which species of mycorrhiza­l fungi would be present and how many there were. The UK locations studied included oaks in Bordon, Hampshire, Purton, Wiltshire and Grizedale, Cumbria; pine in Thetford, Norfolk and the Peak District National Park; and beech and pine in rogate, West Sussex and Pitlochry, Perthshire, Scotland.

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