By Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI STATE
-- Tree losses in South Mississippi from Hurricane Katrina are still
rising 11 months and counting after the devastating storm made landfall. Glenn Hughes, Mississippi State University Extension Service forestry
specialist in Lamar County, said the extent of the damage is still
being assessed and more trees continue dying from affects of the storm. “Live oaks faired very well in the hurricane, especially compared
to a lot of the pines that just snapped,” Hughes said. “The
damage to the oaks was not necessarily that the trees were blown over,
but from the loss of the leaves and many branches. It will take several
years for the canopy to build back.” While many of
the oaks that beautified areas are still standing and can rebound
in time, they remain in harm’s way from reconstruction. “When we get into rebuilding and heavy machinery passes over
the root systems, we will lose some live oaks that survived the storm,” Hughes
said. Tiny roots feed
the trees, supplying the nutrients and water the massive trees must
have to survive. Hughes said the majority of these feeder roots are
concentrated within a foot of the surface and fill the area beneath
the tree’s
previous canopy. Roots do go beyond the canopy and some extend much
deeper than one foot deep. “When you drive a piece of big machinery over the soil around
an oak tree, you crush and compact the soil, damaging the roots and
making it impossible for them to penetrate the compacted soil and get
water,” Hughes said. “Crushing the roots is like strangling
the tree.” To protect these trees from death by construction equipment, Hughes
said to fence off the entire area around the drip line. The drip line
is the line encircling a tree reaching out to the furthest extension
of where the branches once were. “These trees are stressed because of Katrina and the subsequent
drought; we don’t need to stress them further, causing them to
die on us,” Hughes said. While heavy machinery is an obvious threat, smaller vehicles like
cars and pickup trucks can compact the soil and crush roots, too. “Wheeled vehicles have greater ground pressure per square inch
than does the same or heavier piece of equipment with tracks,” Hughes
said. “If you run over a site three times, you’ve compacted
it 85 percent of what is possible, so just a few passes by a piece
of equipment can significantly damage the roots of a tree.” When it is impossible to keep vehicles safely away from a tree, try
to minimize the damage by staying only on one side of the tree. Katrina devastated
pine plantations south of Hattiesburg, and those that survived face
another challenge. The drought following Hurricane Katrina last year
and this summer’s drought are stressing pine
trees, making them susceptible to pine bark beetles. Southern pine bark beetles, the most destructive of the bark beetles,
have not been a major problem this year, but the Ips or Engraver beetles
have. Hughes said these beetles infest downed and damaged trees first,
but then attack stressed, living trees. Landowners should be vigilant
in their battle against these pests. While many trees
are still struggling, Scott Roberts, associate professor of forest
ecology in MSU’s Department of Forestry, said forest
ecosystems are very resilient and can recover from significant damage. “You look at what we as a nation did to our forests in the late
1800s and early 1900s. We abused our forests with mineral development
and timber harvests without replanting, and the forests came back anyway,” Roberts
said. “Today, they look pristine and unencumbered by human impacts,
yet many people would be surprised to see how abused these same areas
were 100 years ago.” Given time, timber and landscapes in coastal areas can recover as
well, but the aesthetic damage will linger for a while. Trees can re-grow lost leaves quickly, but it can take a few years
to re-grow branches that were lost. Roberts said oaks and other hardwoods
re-grow branches more easily than do pines. Where hardwoods may regain
much of their pre-damage appearance in two or three years, pine trees
may take four or five to regain their appearance. “You don’t reestablish a mature landscape in a short period
of time,” Roberts said. -30- Released: July 27, 2006
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
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Storm-surviving
trees still face challenges
Contact: Dr. Glenn Hughes, (601) 794-0671
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:32:10
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw06/060727.html
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