1 / 44

The National Ash Seed Collection Initiative

The National Ash Seed Collection Initiative. Saving the future. Overview. America’s ash trees ( Fraxinus ) are being destroyed by the Emerald Ash Borer. Killed millions of ash trees in Ohio and surrounding states since 2002, as well as Ontario and Quebec

jaser
Download Presentation

The National Ash Seed Collection Initiative

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The National Ash SeedCollection Initiative Saving the future

  2. Overview • America’s ash trees (Fraxinus) are being destroyed by the Emerald Ash Borer. • Killed millions of ash trees in Ohio and surrounding states since 2002, as well as Ontario and Quebec • To date, no attempt at containment or eradication has been successful • Research is ongoing, but EAB continuesto spread

  3. Overview • If containment is not possible, ash seeds will be stored until they can be re-established in the future • X-rayed to ensure viability • Preserved in secure cryogenic vaults • One day, these seeds will form the geneticbase used to return the ash tree to theAmerican landscape

  4. Public Enemy # 1 Agrilus Planipennis

  5. About EAB • Native range is eastern Russia, Northern China, Japan, Korea • Never seen in US before 2002 • Lays eggs in bark of ash trees • Developing larvae devour phloem layer,preventing tree from transporting nutrients • Leaves unique D-shaped exit hole • Adult is only a half-inch long, and is a dark metallic green • Lifecycle usually takes one year, though it cantake as long as two years during the first infestationof a healthy tree

  6. How did EAB get Here? • Can never know for sure • Most likely inside ash wood used for packing material or shipping palettes

  7. How did EAB get Here?

  8. Where is EAB in Ohio?

  9. What is Being Done? • Several areas of research: • Introducing predatory wasps from China • Hybrids of American ash species with Manchurian Ash • Some insecticide treatments show promise, though success is not assured • Federal and State quarantines designed to limit movement of ash wood

  10. What is Being Done? • Several areas of research: • Introducing predatory wasps from China • Hybrids of American ash species with Manchurian Ash • Some insecticide treatments show promise, though success is not assured • Federal and State quarantines designed to limit movement of ash wood • And the last line of defense…

  11. The Ash Seed Collection Initiative • Sponsored by the Rose Lake Plant Materials Center in East Lansing, Michigan, in partnership with the U.S. Forest Service and the National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation • Rose Lake is part of the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Plant Materials Program • Ash seeds delivered to the Rose Lake PMC will be: • Processed by PMC staff • X-rayed by the US Forest Service • Stored in the National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation

  12. Volunteer Seed Collecting • Throughout the year • Identify and locate ash trees • Your own land • Local parks • Public spaces • Fall (September – December) • Collect mature seeds in paper bags • Label bags with site information • Fill out collection form for each bag • Return to local Soil & Water Conservation District office

  13. Ash Tree Identification • Terms used to describe the branching and leaf configurationof ash trees: Ash has 5-9 leaflets Compound leaf (Petiolate) Opposite branching

  14. Ash Tree Identification • Ash look alikes (opposite branched): Walnut Dogwood Box Elder Hickory

  15. Ash Tree Identification • Ash look alikes: Hophornbeam Alternate branching

  16. Green Ash Fraxinus pennsylvanica 60-70 feet at maturity Green Ash seeds 5-9 leaflets on short petiole, round twigs Found in moist or poorly drained soil Furrowed, diamond-shaped bark

  17. Green Ash Fraxinus pennsylvanica

  18. Black Ash 50-70 feet at maturity Fraxinus nigra Black Ash seeds Found in wetlands and poorly drained areas 7-11 dark green leaflets, finely toothed, no petiole Fissured, shaggy bark

  19. Black Ash Fraxinus nigra

  20. White Ash 60-80 feet at maturity Fraxinus americana White Ash seeds 5-9 leaflets on short petiole, underside paler than top Usually found in upland sites Thick fissured bark

  21. White Ash Fraxinus americana

  22. Blue Ash Fraxinus quadrangulata 60-80 feet at maturity Blue Ash seeds Light scaly bark, gets shingled with age 7-11 leaflets on short petiole, 4-sided twigs Found in well-drained upland sites

  23. Blue Ash Fraxinus quadrangulata

  24. Pumpkin Ash Fraxinus profunda 40-70 feet at maturity; seen up to 130 feet Pumpkin Ash seeds Found in moist, swampy sites that remain wet 7-11 leaflets on short petiole; paler and hairy underneath Distinctive shape

  25. Pumpkin Ash Fraxinusprofunda

  26. Seeds • Each seed is contained inside a wing-like packet called a samara • Protects seed • Provides nutrients during germination • Allows seed to become airborne • Samaras hang in groups called panicles

  27. Which Tree to Collect? • Trees with ripe fruit – the samaras are brown • If samaras are green, not ready to pick • Make sure you can reach the seed safely • Don’t hurt yourself! • Get permission before going onprivate land • Wild trees are preferable, but even seedsfrom ash planted by landscapers maybe collected

  28. Collection Methods • Pick entire panicle from branch (if within arm’s reach) • Use a pole pruner • Cut the branch, or use the hook to bend it down • Shake the tree if it’s small enough • Throw a rope over a branch, then pull the rope to shake the branch • Lay a tarp on the ground first • Use a slingshot • Lay a tarp under the tree and leave it for a few days • Place rocks in the corner to anchor it Use your imagination, but be careful!

  29. How Many Seeds to Collect? • At least two quarts per tree • about 3-4 inches in a full-sizepaper grocery bag 3 – 4”

  30. Collection Supplies • Paper bags • Brown grocery bags work great, and can be folded flat • Brown lunch bags will work too • Don’t use plastic bags – the seeds will overheat and die • Sharpie • Collection form • Camera, if you have one • Download collection form at http://www.mi.nrcs.usda.gov/programs/pmc.html • The easy way: http://www.ashseed.org

  31. The Collection Form Plant Information – type of ash tree Collection Information – you Site Information – location of ash tree Instructions

  32. The Collection Procedure • Fill out the Collection Information section • Date of collection • Your name • Your affiliation (Master Gardener, School, Metropark, etc.) • Address information • Phone and email • Was seed collected on tribal land? • If Yes, name of tribe • Include tribal seed in non-tribecollection?

  33. The Collection Procedure • Label your collection bags with your collection information Your name and the date, plus a unique ID number, is sufficient

  34. The Collection Procedure • Gently remove the panicle from the branch • Remember, if shaking or pruning, spread a tarp on the ground

  35. The Collection Procedure • Place the panicle in the collection bag • Two quarts (3 – 4 inches) total;no need to fill it up!

  36. The Collection Procedure • You may find it helpful to put the seeds in a tote bin during collection • More stable in wind andon uneven groundthan a paper bag • Transfer seeds to yourcollection bag whenyou have enough

  37. The Collection Procedure • Then take one twig, 6 – 9 inches long • Include terminal bud • Several leaves or leaf scars Terminal bud Leaf scar

  38. The Collection Procedure • If you can, take a picture of the tree • The entire tree • Close up of the trunk

  39. The Collection Procedure • Fill out the Plant Information section when your collection bagcontains enough seeds • Select the type of ash tree • Was seed taken from a single tree? • Select YES if you know you tookseeds from one tree only • If you cannot guarantee seeds arefrom one tree, select NO • Select likely type of ash tree • Native – tree growing wild in open • Planted – from a nursery

  40. The Collection Procedure • Fill out the Collection Site Information section • State, County, and Township where ash tree is located • Range – survey range of ash tree; leave blank if you don’t know • GPS Coordinates – latitude and longitude of ash tree (if you don’t have a GPS, you can use Google Earth or leave this blank)

  41. The Collection Procedure • Put the collection form in the bag with the seeds and staple it shut.

  42. Post Collection Handling • Keep bags out of heat (over 90° F) • Do not store in car • Separate the bags to promote drying • Store in cool, dry place • Deliver the bags to:Franklin County Soil & Water Conservation District Office1328 Dublin Road, Suite 101Columbus, Ohio 43215(614) 486-9613see Mary Ann Core

  43. Links • Rose Lake Plant Materials Center – collection form and instructions • http://www.ashseed.org/ • Natural Resources Conservation Service • http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/ • Emerald Ash Borer – tons of EAB information • http://www.emeraldashborer.info • Ohio Dept. of Agriculture EAB page • http://www.agri.ohio.gov/divs/plant/eab/eab-index.aspx • Ohio State University EAB Outreach page • http://ashalert.osu.edu/default.asp • Franklin County Soil & Water Conservation District Office • http://www.franklinswcd.org/ • Franklin County Extension Office • http://franklin.osu.edu/

  44. Questions

More Related