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Fungus Disease Killing L.A. Palms10-23-06 | News

Fungus Disease Killing L.A. Palms




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Canary Island Date Palm trees in Los Angeles are dying from an unnamed fungal disease that local tree surgeons haven?EUR??,,????'???t figured out how to stop.


The city’s palm trees ?EUR??,,????'??+ as much a symbol of L.A. as the automobile, movie stars and the beach ?EUR??,,????'??+ are vanishing. The trees are dying of old age and a fungal disease, disappearing one by one from parks and streets, and city planners are replacing them with oaks, sycamores and other species that are actually native to Los Angeles and offer more shade, too.

Not all palms are infected, and there no danger of their vanishing altogether any time soon. But some parts of the city could look noticeably different in the years ahead. And that troubles some.

The problem, says Steve Dunlap, a supervising tree surgeon with the Los Angeles Recreation and Parks Department, is that large numbers of the Canary Island Date Palm ?EUR??,,????'??+ trees with rough trunks and a topknot of fronds that look like green dreadlocks ?EUR??,,????'??+ are succumbing to a fungal disease.

Tree surgeons don’t know how to stop the fungus, which gets into the soil. Dunlap said it doesn’t make sense to replace dying palms with new ones that will probably fall victim to the same ailment. So the city has been planting other varieties of trees.

Nearly 1.6 million trees of all varieties fill L.A.’s parks and line its streets. But city officials had no immediate figures on how many of them are palm trees and how many are dying.

The palms are vanishing just as Los Angeles is kicking off an ambitious project to plant a million new trees. On Oct. 1, officials gave away 3,000 trees, and they have compiled a list of nearly 60 varieties they are planting and encouraging residents to plant. Palm trees did not make the cut.

-Associated Press

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