Current:Home > MyWhat to know about beech leaf disease, the 'heartbreaking' threat to forests along the East Coast-InfoLens
What to know about beech leaf disease, the 'heartbreaking' threat to forests along the East Coast
View Date:2025-01-11 03:18:29
A mysterious parasitic worm that infests trees has experts concerned about forests along the East Coast.
Beech leaf disease was the first detected in Ohio in 2012. How it got to the state is unclear, as is how it rapidly spread as far north as Maine, as far south as Virginia and to parts of all the states in between. It has also been found in Canada.
Large numbers of foliar nematodes are the culprit behind the disease, which interferes with chlorophyll production and starves beech trees to death, according to the Providence Journal’s Alex Kuffner, part of the USA Today Network. The parasite, which is invisible to the naked eye, has also become more widespread in European cultivars often used for landscaping, including weeping beech, copper beech, fern-leaved beech and others.
Considered a “foundational species" in northern hardwood forests and especially critical for black bears, American beech's tall canopy and smooth gray trunk provides long-term habitat and sustenance for numerous types of birds, insects and mammals. The tree — which may live up to 400 years — produces a high-fat nut for bears and other animals to eat, a place for woodpeckers to forage, and homes for animals to nest and raise their young.
“It’s heartbreaking,” University of Rhode Island plant scientist Heather Faubert told Kuffner.
Mihail Kantor, an assistant research professor of nematology at Pennsylvania State University, told Rich Schapiro of NBC News the disease could have “a huge ecological impact.”
What does infestation look like?
When diseased leaves are cut open and wet with a drop of water, thousands of nematodes are known to swim out, according to the Providence Journal.
The worms overwinter in the long, cigar-shaped beech buds and attack leaves as they develop in the spring — which interrupts the tree leaves’ ability to photosynthesize and produce food.
In the first year of infestation, the leaves will appear to have bands. By the second year, the leaves may be crinkled, thick and deformed, or they may not change in appearance at all.
A previously healthy infested tree will often tap into its energy stores to generate a second round of smaller, thinner leaves, but it can only do this a few years in a row before it becomes depleted.
Is there a cure for beech leaf disease?
There is no known way to control or manage this disease right now, according to the New York Department of Environmental Conservation, but research efforts are underway to fight it, Eric Williams of Cape Cod Times, part of the USA Today Network, reported earlier this summer.
Peter Hanlon, an integrated pest management specialist and arborist representative for Bartlett Tree Experts, a private company with a research arm and laboratory based in Charlotte, North Carolina, said Bartlett's scientists had seen promising results in trials with a nematode-attacking fungicide product.
According to NBC News, a small group of researchers have struggled to get funding from government agencies and other sources for needed studies that could help tackle the issue. The spotted lantern fly, on the other hand, has received more research money and international media attention, experts that spoke with NBC said.
“Nothing against the spotted lantern fly … but it doesn’t actually bother people, and it doesn't bother many plants,” Margery Daughtrey, a plant pathologist and senior extension associate at Cornell University’s School of Integrative Plant Science, told NBC. “This is threatening to eliminate an important Northeastern tree species,” she said.
Contributing: Eric Williams, Alex Kuffner
veryGood! (8669)
Related
- Food prices worried most voters, but Trump’s plans likely won’t lower their grocery bills
- Dancing With the Stars' Brooks Nader Reveals Relationship Status During Debut With Gleb Savchenko
- Ringo Starr guides a submarine of singalongs with his All Starr band: Review
- California passes protections for performers' likeness from AI without contract permission
- 'Underbanked' households more likely to own crypto, FDIC report says
- Small plane lands safely at Boston’s Logan airport with just one wheel deployed
- Mary Jo Eustace Details Coparenting Relationship With Dean McDermott and Tori Spelling
- JoJo Details Battles With Alcohol and Drug Addictions
- Hurricane forecasters on alert: November storm could head for Florida
- Xandra Pohl Fuels Danny Amendola Dating Rumors at Dancing With the Stars Taping
Ranking
- Why was Jalen Ramsey traded? Dolphins CB facing former team on 'Monday Night Football'
- As Jimmy Carter nears his 100th birthday, a musical gala celebrates the ‘rock-and-roll president’
- Eagles' Nick Sirianni explains why he didn't address players following loss to Falcons
- Mississippi high court rejects the latest appeal by a man on death row since 1994
- Congress returns to unfinished business and a new Trump era
- Did You Know Earth Is Set to Have Another Moon in Its Orbit? Here's What That Means
- False reports of explosives found in a car near a Trump rally spread online
- US sends soldiers to Alaska amid Russian military activity increase in the area
Recommendation
-
Louisville officials mourn victims of 'unthinkable' plant explosion amid investigation
-
When does 'The Penguin' come out? Release date, cast, where to watch the new 'Batman' series
-
Texas lawmakers show bipartisan support to try to stop a man’s execution
-
Federal Reserve is set to cut interest rates for the first time in 4 years
-
Garth Brooks wants to move his sexual assault case to federal court. How that could help the singer.
-
Suspension of security clearance for Iran envoy did not follow protocol, watchdog says
-
Inside the Brooklyn federal jail where Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs is locked up: violence, squalor and death
-
A vandal badly damaged a statue outside a St. Louis cathedral, police say