A Harbinger for Southern Oregon?
Sudden oak death fungus (SOD), the same non-native pathogen that is spreading in neighboring Curry County (most recent blog here), has been ravaging parts of the Coast Range in California. The standing dead tanoaks, coast live oaks, and California black oaks are providing nicely-cured fuel for the Basin Complex Fire, which has now burned over 77,000 acres and is just 18 percent contained. From this link...
Although the massive oak die-off has swept through forests lining California's central and northern coasts, the Big Sur area is especially hard hit, said UC Davis plant pathology professor David Rizzo, an expert in the disease.
"It's reached its apex in Big Sur," Rizzo said Sunday. "The thing with Big Sur that's making it so bad is that's probably the worst place in the state for dead trees."
He estimates that 1 million dead oak trees can be found in a 200,000-acre sweep of Big Sur forest that he has studied for the last three years in a federally funded study of sudden oak death. That number was confirmed Sunday by retired U.S. Forest Service forester John Kelly, who conducted aerial surveys of dead trees in area forests and is now advising Basin Complex fire managers.
While SOD only kills a few types of trees, it can infect and be spread by a wide variety of trees and bushes. No doubt the fire helping to destroy some of the carriers in the forests there...but only some of them.
"You look in some of these canyons, and you'll see 70%, 80% of tanoaks are dead," said Rizzo, who expressed concern about the Palo Colorado Canyon area that fire crews have been defending.
U.S. Forest Service forest ecologist Lloyd Williams said Sunday that the dead oaks were most prevalent on the fire's western slope, representing about one-third of the 72,000-acre Basin Complex fire area.
"They're added fuel to the fire," said Williams, the botanist for Los Padres National Forest. "The intensity is much hotter. The fire burns hotter. It spreads faster." Since many of the dead oaks are still standing, he said "The fire can go up the tree and burning embers can spread."
Fortunately at the end of last month, our legislature's Emergency Board came through with extra money to battle SOD in Curry County.
The $427,500 in general funds the E-Board allocated for sudden oak death eradication came in spite of a lack of support from the Department of Administrative Services.
"We're very happy to see the state step up on that piece," said Katie Fast, director of government affairs for the Oregon Farm Bureau. "It was not recommended by DAS, and there are challenges on getting the federal funds to make sure that project continues."
The Oregon Department of Forestry is using the state money to keep its eradication program operating while it looks for new federal funding.
The U.S. Forest Service in the past has helped the state pay for its SOD eradication program, but those funds have dried up, ODF spokesman Dan Postrel said.
What the heck is up with our DAS and USFS? We sure don't want to see what SOD could do to the forests and agriculture here in the Rogue Valley...or up say in the Willamette Valley, where it could potentially wreak havoc on the nursery industry.

Recent Comments