Ash dieback fungus is only the latest a series of disasters
threatening British woodland. Profit-driven globalisation is spreading
diseases, whilst climate change and pollution leave trees vulnerable to
assaults they might have been able to fight off in past times.
Add in indifference on the part of successive governments and you have the recipe for environment calamity.
For example, three million larch trees and thousands of
mature oaks and chestnuts have been felled over the last three years in an
attempt to halt the advance of the oak processionary moth.
Over the past five years, the disgustingly named “bleeding
canker”, previously confined to a small number of horse chestnut trees in the
south of England ,
has spread throughout the country.
The Forestry Commission’s website lists 15 serious current
problems and concludes: “With a recent increase in findings of new pests
and diseases, it is clear that Britain 's
trees are facing unprecedented threats. Our science indicates that climate
change will create the conditions for even more pest and disease activity.”
The failure by successive governments to ban imports of ash
saplings from Europe has allowed the deadly ash dieback fungus to take hold in
the UK .
The disease has been rampant in Europe for a
decade. Industry bodies like the Horticultural Trades Association and the
Confederation of Forest Industries have been begging the Department of Food and
Rural Affairs (DEFRA) to act since 2008.
The disease was first identified in saplings in the UK in February
this year, and even then there was no ban. To try to halt the spread of the
disease over 100,000 young ash trees were felled and burned across the country.
But it was too late – the disease has been found in mature
trees in an area of woodland in East
Anglia and it will be virtually impossible
to prevent it spreading. Only now has the government imposed an import ban. This is closing
the stable door after the horse has not only bolted – it has grown old and
died!
It is not as if we don’t know what can happen with
uncontrolled wood imports. Dutch elm disease, which wiped out all the mature
elms in Britain
from the mid-1970s, arrived in a consignment of infected elm logs. Within a
decade about 20 million elms were dead, and all efforts to reinstate elms have
failed because of the persistence of the disease.
The biggest-ever tree extinction was the annihilation of the
American chestnut, a magnificent tree that was the heart of the native forest
from the north to the south and east into the Appalachians, where it could grow
to over 100 feet. There was nothing like it for beauty and usefulness.
Then in 1904 a botanist working at the Bronx Zoo noticed a
strange disease on the park’s trees. Entothia parasitica had arrived in
imported Asian chestnut saplings. Within 40 years, the American chestnut was wiped
out.
The only interest the ConDems have shown in forests is their
attempt to sell them off to the highest bidder. And that threat has not gone
away by any means as they try to smuggle privatisation in by the back door.
The reason the ban on ash saplings was not imposed either by
New Labour or the Coalition is because it goes against their obsession with
free markets – and also, frankly, because they simply don’t care!
It’s not that new species should never be allowed into the UK , or that all
global trade is bad. But it has to be done in a controlled and thoughtful way,
with environmental concerns always taking priority over profits and the free
market.
You have to ask, what are these governments for if they
can’t even act to protect the very substance of the environment we live in and
rely on?
Penny Cole
Environment editor
1 comment:
A third of British woodland is Ash. Can anyone give me one valid reason why we ever needed to import any ash trees into the UK?
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