I've discussed this on here a couple of times but a picture is worth a thousand words. We have roughly 40 acres and about 10 acres around the house. That acreage has roughly 200 large oak trees that a fair portion of have seen significant decline in the last 5 years. There is no real pattern to the loss such as high on the hill vs low, or big vs small, north vs south. Trees in the middle of otherwise healthy trees just simply die from the top down. However there is one area of the property where about 10 trees in close proximity have all seemed to die. The rest of the property seems to be losing trees in a random pattern.
I have called out a couple of different Arborists recently for opinions.One of them blamed the losses on Oak Borers (I didn't get a specific species). The other said it was a combination of both oak borers and a black fungus. They indicated that the black seeps on the trunk base were from the borers and the black fungus would rot out the roots and eventually kill the tree. Both of their explanations seemed plausible since the trees seemed to be having vascular issues and the tree tops suffered the most. Prior to them going they show thinning in growth at the top and lots of new growth on the lower end of the tree. The majority of the trees we are losing are 2-3 feet in diameter but we've lost some in the 4-6 foot in diameter as well which were really hard losses.
I have a few questions.
1. Is this an issue that will spread to the remaining trees?
2. Is there a treatment we should be applying?
3. We are removing the dead or dying trees. Is that enough or is there a reason to be more aggressive?
4. If it is oak borers is there a preventative treatment?
I have called out a couple of different Arborists recently for opinions.One of them blamed the losses on Oak Borers (I didn't get a specific species). The other said it was a combination of both oak borers and a black fungus. They indicated that the black seeps on the trunk base were from the borers and the black fungus would rot out the roots and eventually kill the tree. Both of their explanations seemed plausible since the trees seemed to be having vascular issues and the tree tops suffered the most. Prior to them going they show thinning in growth at the top and lots of new growth on the lower end of the tree. The majority of the trees we are losing are 2-3 feet in diameter but we've lost some in the 4-6 foot in diameter as well which were really hard losses.
I have a few questions.
1. Is this an issue that will spread to the remaining trees?
2. Is there a treatment we should be applying?
3. We are removing the dead or dying trees. Is that enough or is there a reason to be more aggressive?
4. If it is oak borers is there a preventative treatment?