TINFOIL IS FOR BAKED POTATOES, NOT TREES” FORESTER
BY HEATHER MCLAUGHLIN
15 JUNE 2012
Fredericton’s city forester and manager of parks and
trees cringes when he sees tinfoil, slathered in Vaseline, wrapped around the
trunks of trees in the city.
The remedy is often used by people trying to ward off
forest tent caterpillars from crawling up a tree to the leafy branches, which
they then defoliate.
“It’s probably something that’s been traditional and
they think it’s preventative maintenance,” said Don Murray. “I have seen one
(forest) tent caterpillar this season. We haven’t seen any damage and we saw
some virus in the population of tent caterpillars last year, so I think we
dodged a bullet there last year and nature kind of looked after itself.
“The problem with wrapping tinfoil or other products
around the stems of the trees is you change the temperature of the bark or you
can actually smother the bark. The bark is a living organism that has to
breathe, so if you smother it with tinfoil and Vaseline or lard or whatever you
put on it, you run a real high risk of killing your tree.”
Murray said he has yet to see a tree die from
caterpillar infestation, but he has seen tries die due to use of tinfoils and
other things.
“We ask people to keep their tinfoil for their baked
potatoes,” Murray said.
A bigger pest this year will be the European Chafer
beetle that has landed in Fredericton, probably imported on out-of-province
nursery stock.
A mild winter meant the beetle population wasn’t hit
hard. Damaged lawns are appearing around the city again, as they did last year
in Sunshine Gardens.
“This spring a lot of people had lost a lot of their
lawns and they have actually stripped all of the sod off and they’re either
putting new turf down or putting in alternatives,” Murray said.
“If we don’t get a traditional cold winter with deep
frost, we may learn to live with this pest.”
The European Chafer, Rhizotrogus majalis, is a serious
pest of turf, horticulture and field crops in eastern North America. In 2001,
it was found in British Columbia in lawns and boulevards.
The adult beetle is tan-coloured and resembles a small
June beetle. It’s about 12 millimetres long.
According to B.C.’s Department of Agriculture, which
has issued a fact sheet on the insects, eggs hatch around mid-July and the
grubs moult twice over eight weeks. The mature grubs are well adapted to cool,
moist conditions and feed all fall.
During the winter, they dig down during periods of
freezing conditions, but otherwise remain within five centimetres of the
surface.
They feed in the spring until April, when they become
pupae. Adults emerge in late May, fly to nearby deciduous trees to mate and
feed, and subsequently females deposit up to 50 eggs each.
The grubs are the damaging stage. They feed on all
types of grass and, if food is scarce, may move into vegetable plantings to
feed on corn, potatoes, blueberries, strawberries, conifers and other crops.
Apart from the damage the grubs do themselves by
feeding on the grasses, they tend to attract skunks and birds who will dig up
lawns to feed on larger grubs.
1 comment:
This may be a good idea for a day or two, otherwise you could be slowing down or damaging possible future tree growth by altering the temperature.
-Tony Salmeron
Tree Removal Charlotte
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