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Inonotus on Ash....


sean
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Yea thats what i thought.....and what about Hispidus canker?? Could you explain that for me please.....sorry.:blushing:

 

Sean,

As I don't know what you mean with Hispidus canker, I assume you mean this : Bark canker ash ?

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Hispidus Canker is not related to fungal or bacterial canker in ash, it is a symptom directly related to Inonotus hispidus. maybe Canker is the wrong word here that should technically be substituted for necroses, i apologise for this in past postings on this fungi and adding to confusions. (see images below)

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59765b4b1b8ee_Ashwierdo066.jpg.02e8209ca8943fc7e0245309794e3525.jpg

 

59765b4b1f8e5_Catalpa396.jpg.4fec9aab537e82232ca75dc854982b61.jpg

 

59765b4b222f7_hispidus2153.jpg.8d896b864ccc9449d813b004c931a477.jpg

 

59765b4b24a85_Hatfieldforest2182010320.jpg.e21cd74b29941a94feb8315d21a84f6f.jpg

 

59765b4b26d7c_hispidus2196.jpg.778beba4e248bef79d3f0aa12b7b56c7.jpg

 

59765b4b28f36_holidayo8(182).jpg.163fc78340e55e048204bb4543dadd3f.jpg

 

59765b4b2b3fb_mycota(527).jpg.f60594c3de47c7f2a62b1f2269205255.jpg

 

59765b4b2d4d7_newmoth30710025.jpg.4cb9b1a6eb232d139c63cb00216f1e70.jpg

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Hispidus Canker ... maybe Canker is the wrong word here that should technically be substituted for necroses (see images below)

 

Aha, now were talking :thumbup1: , although I must admit, that this also seems an U.K. Fraxinus-I. hispidus related phenomenon, because I have never seen it over here, nor elswhere on the continent (yet). Does it also occur on other tree species like Ulmus ?

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unfortunately doesn't it always depend on targets? and thats where the risk is assessed?

 

So, we have an ash with hispidus targets exist, do we fell it? or do we reduce it in keeping with the natural potential outcome, thereby retaining the tree and associated ecology and reducing the risk to negligible?

 

and the risk on a reduced ash of limb failure with hispidus is negligible in 99% of cases.

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Aha, now were talking :thumbup1: , although I must admit, that this also seems an U.K. Fraxinus-I. hispidus related phenomenon, because I have never seen it over here, nor elswhere on the continent (yet). Does it also occur on other tree species like Ulmus ?

 

So ash do not get the necroses in the netherlands or germany?

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define high risk?

 

30 ton of tree failing at the root, or 500kilos of limb?

 

Im defining it by a fungus that is likely to cause structual failure and damage to persons or property would it matter the size, its the potential of the situation of the tree and its surroundings that would be important,but if the wood is infected in a risk situation by a high risk of complete break down of structual integrity in wood down to rot caused by inonotus then its high risk! and from i have seen and even your photos show, is that break down.

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sorry hama think i put my point across wrong:blush:

 

i had this vision of an ash with hispidus in a nursery/kindergarten play area leaning over a fence towards a busy main road (these trees exist i have pics somewhere)

 

the point then being about high risk in heavy branch failure vs whole tree failure, but in this situation does the position of the tree (tis about 45') mean that it becomes a high risk?

 

i think "risk" as a word differs from situation to situation and cannot just be classified as high, low, moderate etc

 

i do agree with you on the natural pollarding being "less" of a risk than tree failure but at what point does this branch failure become to "high" of a risk to save the tree?

 

does that kinda make sense:confused1:

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