Survey seeks to improve sudden oak death outreach
Author(s) -
M Robin
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
california agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.472
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 2160-8091
pISSN - 0008-0845
DOI - 10.3733/ca.v059n04p202
Subject(s) - outreach , sudden death , geography , medicine , economic growth , economics , cardiology
Survey seeks to improve sudden oak death outreach trees can ultimately die. P. ramorum infects a variety of host plants that carry and spread the pathogen but are not killed by it, including California bay laurel, coast redwood and common nursery plants such as rhododendrons and camellias. The outreach survey was posted online for a month and targeted people who are already concerned and knowledgeable about sudden oak death, including nursery professionals, arborists, homeowners, government resource specialists and UCCE Master Gardeners. “Part of the challenge in getting the word out is the diversity of those who need to know,” Frankel says. Overall, the response to the survey was positive. “It validated what we’ve already done,” Alexander says. More than 90% of the 302 respondents said information about the disease was easily accessible, and the primary source of this information was the COMTF Web site. In addition, the training sessions were useful to nearly all of the 65% of respondents who had attended them. Moreover, based on what they learned about P. ramorum, nearly 90% of private sector respondents had changed their business practices (by, for example, disinfecting tools and other equipment after working with infected trees) and 80% also changed their personal practices (by, for example, washing their shoes and car tires when leaving infested areas). The survey was used to identify further outreach needs. “We got lots of concrete suggestions,” Alexander says. “It was like brainstorming with people.” The suggestions included providing more information on how to distinguish P. ramorum from common look-alike diseases such as root rot and bacterial wetwood, and coordinating outreach efforts with state and local parks in infested areas. Alexander also wants to increase outreach to nurseries. “The pathogen has a huge economic impact on nurseries because a positive find means destroying all the neighboring plants in the block,” she says. So far, nurseries have destroyed 1.6 million plants nationwide due to P. ramorum infections. Controlling the pathogen in nurseries is challenging because it thrives in the shady, moist conditions that are also preferred by the ornamental host plants. Sanitary measures include keeping host plants in smaller blocks and separating them with nonhost plants, making sure water does not drip from above and splash on leaves, and keeping plants on gravel instead of soil, where the pathogen can lie dormant for months. However, these measures are not foolproof. “Some nurseries have had a hard time eradicating the pathogen and it’s a big mystery why,” says Alexander. “There’s still a lot we don’t know about how the disease spreads and establishes.” — Robin Meadows Outreach news
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