Chemistry
Eds advice is good.
cals.arizona.edu/PLP/plpext/diseases/trees/oleander/oleleaf.htm
The almond analogy was just a reminder that different varieties of the same species have slightly different chemistry.
this was a suggestions as to why white flowered variety was attacked and the pink was not. e.g. if the vector is a sap sucker then it may not like the "taste" of the variety with pink flowers. I don't know if flower colour is related to the toxicity in Oleanders
Insects and light spectrum's
The insects seeing in infra-red is one way that insects are better adapted, than us humans, they can tell that a tree is stressed before we can. If the pink flowered variety is local "provenance" and the white is from a different "provenance" then the white flowered variety is less adapted and more likely to be stressed first.
Insects are attracted to the weaker, stressed plants. A plant that has been weakened by transplant shock, improper hardening off, poor nutrition becomes an easy target. The plant’s color changes in the infra-red spectrum that we cant see in the visible light spectrum and bugs pick up on that.
When plants are sick, a) they become physically less sturdy, b) the stems lose the stiffness associated with adequate water retention, c) the outer surface composition changes, and d) wilting softens the plant tissues, making them easier for bugs to chew or suck thus creating holes in the plant.
The essential oils which are in the plant tissues will evaporate in minuscule amounts into the atmosphere through these holes, and at this point we are unable to protect plants from the insects who can be attracted by only a few molecules of their favorite meal. For example, aphids will walk right by healthy, vigorous plants to attack stressed ones.
Ed
The place is a mess and will take months just to pick up all the broken trees, but you can see clean spots appearing.
Plenty of work many are doing it for free I'am one of 500 registered volunteers.
council press release
"Townsville is steadily getting back on its feet as the recovery from Cyclone Yasi continues on the streets, in parks and in backyards across the city. Townsville’s massive clean-up is continuing today with a council and Army crews clearing the city’s roads of thousands of fallen trees.
The council alone has 270 personnel in 35 crews working around the city equipped with 60 chainsaws, 55 trucks, eight semi-trailer tippers, 27 backhoes, eight bobcats and eight front end loaders to cut, load and transport the tree waste.
Lou Litster Park has been set up as a temporary depot and is mulching 120 cubic metres of mulch per hour through two tub grinders. Other units are located at Harvey Range Transfer Station, Stuart landfill and Magnetic Island landfill. Two more are on their way to the city and will be stationed at Jensen transfer station and the suburb of Cosgrove. Each unit produces 60 tonnes of mulch an hour.
Council also has eight woodchippers out on the road and more on their way and has requested additional chainsaws from the State. The Army is also out in force assisting with the removal of trees in a range of locations.
The city’s landfill and transfer sites have also been accepting green waste from private and commercial users logging almost 2400 cubic metres or 177 tonnes in the past few days."
I see more companies on the road each day, many earthmoving companies are getting signed up as "medievalists" I mean "removalists"