CBC NEWS — Hundreds of ash trees are being removed from Winnipeg neighbourhoods as the city’s forest canopy is hit by another invasive species.
According to a report by CBC News, the cottony ash psyllid — also known as jumping tree lice — has been added to a list of threats to Winnipeg trees, which also includes the emerald ash borer and Dutch elm disease.
“About 700 black ash trees are going to be removed,” city forester Martha Barwinsky said Wednesday.
“These are black ash trees that we identified last year that were either dead or almost dead because of the cottony ash psyllid infestation.”
The 700 trees are being removed primarily from Riverview and River Heights, but the insect was first found around The Forks in 2017. Evidence of the insect has since been found “pretty much throughout the city, just in varying degrees depending on the neighbourhoods,” Barwinsky said.
The insects are about three millimetres long (only slightly larger than an aphid). They have yellow and black markings, clear wings with shading toward the tip, and can jump, a provincial website about invasive species says.
They infest Manchurian and black ash trees. When eggs hatch in spring, the nymphs (immature insects) suck the sap out of new leaves, causing them to curl, and produce a white cottony substance.
A second generation of nymphs that hatches in August then feeds in the curled leaves created by the first generation.
The insects weaken trees, leaving them vulnerable to disease and premature death, although trees can recover if they’re not badly infested, Barwinsky said.
Winnipeg’s winters haven’t slowed the invasive species down yet, she said, and they seem to thrive in hot, dry summers like the one in Winnipeg last year.
“Our ash trees have no resistance or no tolerance to these pests,” she said. “There’s also no natural predators.”
With the additional threat of the emerald ash borer, the city has decided to simply remove the trees with the worst infestations and stop planting ash trees.
Barwinsky expects the city to replant fewer than half the trees it cuts down this year.
Last year the city removed 11,900 trees. Of the 5,800 removed from boulevards and parks, only 2,500 were replaced. The rest were removed from private property and natural areas, and the city doesn’t replant those, either.
“It’s been very difficult. I know with our staff, for the past three years in particular, all they’ve been doing is removing trees, and it really is disheartening,” Barwinsky said.
“We would much rather be planting trees or pruning trees and maintaining them.”
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