Felicity Stout said overseeing the felling of so many trees had been hard Peak District bosses are planning to create a tree ...
The ash dieback fungus could spread more quickly and affect more trees than previously expected, according to research at the University of Exeter. Exeter scientists have discovered that asexual ...
Ash dieback and other tree diseases are resulting in significantly more greenhouse gas emissions than previously thought because a large amount of carbon is escaping from woodland soils, a study has ...
The spread of a disease which has devastated Britain's ash trees appears to be slowing in parts of the South West. However experts warn ash dieback has hit areas like the Mendip Hills in Somerset ...
Ash dieback threatens 95% of all European ash trees and has already killed or severely damaged a quarter in southern Sweden and destroyed more than 80% of young ash trees in Norway. The researchers ...
Ash dieback is a severe disease that has substantially threatened European ash populations, particularly Fraxinus excelsior. The disease is caused by the invasive ascomycete fungus Hymenoscyphus ...
Ash dieback – a fatal disease of Britain’s native ash trees (Fraxinus excelsior) – is one of the worst tree disease epidemics the UK has ever seen. The disease is caused by a fungus that originated in ...
New research finds that ash dieback is far less severe in the isolated conditions ash is often found in, such as forests with low ash density or in open canopies like hedges, suggesting the long term ...
A study suggests that some types of environment help block the spread of ash dieback disease, which threatens millions of ash trees in the UK. Landscapes with hedgerows and woods made up of several ...