Just six months prior, I had researched and written a post entitled Seeking "Lingering Trees"--Some Hope for Ash and Beech Trees. The post encouraged readers to keep an eye out for lingering trees, i.e. ash or beech that were still looking healthy while those around them were dying. And here, along Herrontown Road, I witnessed the very phenomenon I had read and written about.
That line of trees is all ash trees. All but one have succumbed to the depredations of the introduced insect called Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) that has been devastating millions, more likely billions, of ash throughout the eastern U.S.. Not having co-evolved, our native ash tree species lack resistance to this nonnative insect. Hitchhiking into Michigan in wooden packing crates from China in the 1990s, EAB spread eastward arriving in Princeton in 2015. What ten years ago was Princeton's most common native tree is quickly becoming its most rare, impacting all the fauna dependent upon it for food.
Though it's hard to say at this point whether these are true survivors, this would not be the first time Princeton played host to native trees unusually resistant to introduced insects and disease. There's the "Princeton" variety of American elm that has shown resistance to Dutch Elm Disease. And we're having some luck thus far with bringing back the native butternut from nuts gathered from two lingering trees then growing on the Textile Research Institute property overlooking Carnegie Lake. Butternuts have been laid low by an introduced canker disease.
Unfortunately, we'll never find out if two of those lingering ash along Herrontown Road will survive. They were cut down by a tree company yesterday. Last fall, I had knocked on the door of the owner to alert them to the remarkable surviving qualities of their ash trees. No one was home, and I forgot to follow up. Sometimes, I get the feeling like there are holes in the universe where I was supposed to be.
Unfortunately, we'll never find out if two of those lingering ash along Herrontown Road will survive. They were cut down by a tree company yesterday. Last fall, I had knocked on the door of the owner to alert them to the remarkable surviving qualities of their ash trees. No one was home, and I forgot to follow up. Sometimes, I get the feeling like there are holes in the universe where I was supposed to be.
I've reached out to the town arborist and open space manager, to see if there's any way "lingering" trees could be inventoried, and homeowners encouraged to protect them, so that any local resistance can be given a chance.
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