Sudden
Oak Death.
It is reported that the authorities are considering restricting
the importation of plants from the United States to protect Britains
oaks from a disease that could depopulate our ancient woodlands.
The problem is a fungis-like
disease known as Sudden oak death which was initially
brought in by plants imported from Asia. It is so potent that it
can kill oaks within a few weeks of infection.
Concerns are now being
raised about imports from the USA where a second form of the disease
has been diagnosed. This varient also attacks ash, beech and other
species including bilberry and Scottish heather.
Already outbreaks of
the disease, also called phytophthora ramorum, have been identified
at over 600 sites in England and Wales and many others in Scotland,
The infestation normally
begins to manifest itself with brown and black blotching on the
leaves and twigs, before developing into oozing cankers on the trunk,
leading to rotting and death. Experts fear it is spreading so fast
that it could have the same impact as Dutch elm disease, which is
istimated to have killed 25 million elms during the twenty year
period beginning 1965.
This week a report from
the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) is to be released. This will
warn that the number of disease outbreaks on all types of plant
is up 60% on last year. It claims this is linked with the surge
in imports of exotic foreign plants.
British consumers spent
£870m on them in 2005.
The RHS report adds:
Alien pests and diseases, inadvertently imported on exotic
plants, are threatening the plants in our gardens and across the
countryside. Increased global plant trade, coupled with evidence
of rapid climate change, suggests that the problem will only get
worse.
One option in countering
the threat of sudden oak death is said to be extending the existing
plant passport system controlled by the EU, which restricts
the import of vulnerable species, especially rhododendrons, from
infected parts of America.
Simon Thornton-Wood,
the director of science and learning at the RHS, said: This
disease is hard to control. It has killed a lot of trees in America
and we need to take it very seriously.
Land & People agrees
we have already seen what the importation of the North American
grey squirrel has done to our indigenous red, we need to ensure
that our oaks and other native species are protected from alien
species of flora.