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Dead `ohi`a with live trees and uluhe.
Credit: DLNR
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Lots of news organizations spread word that a variant of the
Rapid `Ōhi`a Death fungus has been found on Kaua`i, but none told the
larger story.
That story is the powerful effort that’s going on to save the
tree that has been called the mother of the forest.
`Ōhi`a is really a remarkable part of the Hawaiian
environment, growing in many environments from sea level to high mountains, and
in many cases serving as the dominant canopy tree.
It feeds and houses insects. Those insects and the tree’s
nectar feed birds. And it houses birds, both in its branches and in cavities in
its trunk.
It is prominent in culture, common in legend, and it’s just
plain gorgeous with its crimson and orange puffball flowers and widely varying
leaf types. Buds can be reddish or orange or green, and shiny or covered with a
frost of silver hairs.
“It is the foundation tree of our watershed,” said Bob
Masuda, deputy director of the state Department of Land and Natural Resources.
As a community we despaired when there arrived a fungus, Ceratocystis lukuohia, which began
killing trees by the thousands on Hawai`i Island. Many trees were infected and
once infected, death was certain often in days to weeks. It was sometimes
called `Ōhi`a Wilt, and sometimes more dramatically, Rapid `Ōhi`a
Death.
It turns out that a small percentage of trees was also
infected with a slower-developing related fungus, Ceratocystis huliohia. It could take months to years to kill a
tree, often taking single branch systems before killing off the entire tree.
That’s the one that has now been found on East Kaua`i. Not
nearly as virulent as its spooky cousin, but still a problem for `ōhi`a. Foresters
suggest it probably shouldn’t be called Rapid `Ōhi`a Death, because, well, it
doesn’t progress so rapidly.
Both are examples of something called a vascular wilt—a
fungus that clogs the tree’s ability to transfer water between roots and leaves
There are some interesting things about these diseases,
including that they appear to have very different sources. The fast-acting one
is most closely related to fungi in Latin America, while the slower one appears
to be more closely related to Asian fungi.
And the slower-moving version may spread slowly enough that
it was in the Hawaiian Islands first, but wasn’t recognized. There are lots of
things that can kill `ōhi`a trees, lots of disease that can
attack them—although none as aggressive as Ceratocystis
lukuohia.
One of the big unanswered questions about both diseases is
whether there is hope. Whether there are any examples of `ōhi`a trees that may
be resistant—and thus could be used to repopulate the Hawaiian forest.
To help find that out, lots of research is underway,
including aerial surveys on several islands to better understand the outbreak.
Here’s one study on the aerial monitoring from the journal Remote Sensing.
Pathologist Lisa Keith, of the USDA Pacific Basin
Agricultural Research Service, said that researchers are growing seedlings of
different varieties of `ōhi`a and infecting them with the fungus. So far, some
are still surviving—perhaps a good sign, although they may just be heading
downhill slower than others.
She and others are also working with different fungicides,
which may not save an infected tree, but might keep a particularly valued tree
alive longer. Others are working with other techniques to try to strengthen the
trees so they can potentially survive infection.
It’s clear that humans are big carriers. If a tool like an
ax, chain saw or machete cuts an infected tree, it can easily spread the
disease if you cut into a second tree without disinfecting the tool. Any injury
to the tree can be a highway for infection.
Scientists are studying the beetles that may be spreading the
disease by boring into the trees.
And they’re trying to determine how effective the fungus is
at being spread by wind.
And what if it’s not just those beetles, but other insects.
Researchers have chunks of infected tree wood in netted containers, to watch
what other insects might emerge over time.
If the disease is spread by wind, then perhaps you could
limit the spread by cutting down a swath of trees downwind from an infected
patch, to deny the fungus trees to spread to. Kind of like cutting a
firebreak. The state Division of
Forestry and Wildlife is working on that technique.
Researchers are studying old photographs of the forest to try
to determine what they can about disease in `ōhi`a over the years.
And scientists have developed quarantine measures to reduce
the spread—like limiting the movement of infected wood.
The number of organizations working on this issue is
impressive. It includes the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa College of Tropical
Agriculture and Human Resources, the U.S. Pacific Basin Agricultural Research
Center, USDA Forest Service Institute of Pacific Islands Forestry, the Department
of Land and Natural Resources’ Division of Forestry and Wildlife, University of
Hawaiʻi at Hilo, The Nature Conservancy, National Tropical Botanical Garden, Hawaiʻi Association of Watershed
Partnerships, Coordinating Group on Alien Pest Species, the Big Island, Maui,
Molokai, O'ahu and Kaua'i Invasive Species Committees, USFS Region 5 State and
Private Forestry, USGS Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center, Carnegie
Airborne Observatory, Hawai'i Invasive
Species Council and Hawai`i Department of Agriculture -Plant Quarantine Branch.
A sign of hope is that not every tree in a diseased stand
dies. But it’s not yet clear whether that’s because surviving trees might be
resistant to the disease, or that they simply haven’t been infected yet.
That said, the `ōhi`a is so important to the Hawaiian
environment that researchers and foresters hope to be able to identify
resistant trees.
If they can find them, then the daunting task will be a massive
statewide effort to replant these seminal trees throughout the Hawaiian forest.
©
Jan TenBruggencate 2018