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Media
Contacts:
Dr. Eric Hinesley,
919/515-1223
Dr. John Frampton,
919/515-7580
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Dec.
17, 2002
Study
Shows Grafting a Viable Option in Combating Fraser Fir
Fungus
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Twenty-five
years ago, the North Carolina Fraser fir represented
less than one percent of all Christmas trees in the
United States.
Today,
the Fraser fir is a popular Christmas tree in North
America - so popular that it has been chosen to decorate
the White House more times than any other species.
But
the Fraser fir has recently been at the mercy of a fatal
fungus - Phytophthora root rot - that infects and destroys
the root system of the tree. Almost nine percent of
all Christmas trees grown in North Carolina are lost
to the disease, research indicates, resulting in millions
of dollars in losses.
To
remedy the problem, North Carolina State University
researchers Dr. John Frampton, associate professor of
forestry and Christmas tree geneticist, and Dr. Eric
Hinesley, professor of horticultural science, have developed
a grafting procedure that joins Fraser fir shoots to
the rootstock of disease-resistant trees. The procedure
has shown promising results in testing, with more than
90 percent success rates in greenhouse testing and success
rates anywhere from 60 to 100 percent when transplanted
into the ground.
"We
thought," Hinesley said, "if we can take a
Fraser fir, a tree that's the whole package - pretty,
soft, with a nice fragrance - and graft it to a rootstock
that is resistant to Phytophthora root rot, we might
be able to reclaim some of the lost land."
Phytophthora
root rot tends to get started in areas where drainage
is poor - at the bottom of hills or places that stay
consistently wet. It is spread by contaminated soil,
infected plants and flowing water that contains fungus
spores. Once Phytophthora root rot infects the soil,
it is almost impossible to eliminate, researchers say.
The first sign of Phytophthora root rot is a change
in the needle color at the base of the tree from a verdant
green to a rusty red. Eventually the needles on the
Fraser fir wilt and the tree dies.
To
test the new grafting procedure, the NC State researchers
had to first determine the resistance of several fir
species to the disease. In laboratory greenhouse experiments,
fir species were found to range from very susceptible
to Phytophthora root rot to almost completely resistant.
Momi, Turkish, Korean, Canaan and Nordmann firs all
appear to have some resistance to the disease, the researchers
say. All would make a good replacement to the Fraser
fir except the momi fir, an undesirable yellow-green
tree with sharp needles.
Other
species of fir have distinct advantages over the Fraser
fir in that they are more tolerant of a higher temperature
during the growing season. Fraser firs grow naturally
on isolated mountaintops in western N.C. at elevations
above 4,500 feet, yet most Christmas tree farms are
located at much lower elevations. Grafting, researchers
say, might allow Christmas tree growers to plant trees
in North Carolina's Piedmont region, where most Fraser
firs traditionally have trouble surviving.
Researchers
tested newly grafted trees at NC State's Lake Wheeler
Research Lab in Raleigh and the Upper Mountain Research
Station in Laurel Springs, N.C. The trees were also
tested in the mountains of Alleghany County, N.C.
In
the greenhouses, the grafted trees' survival rates ranged
from 93 to 98 percent, with the exception of the momi
fir, which survived only 83 percent of the time. When
transplanted into the land, survival rates were highest
for the momi fir (80 to 100 percent), Nordmann fir (60
to 96 percent) and the Turkish fir (73 to 100 percent).
The
study confirms that grafting can be accomplished successfully,
researchers say, providing much needed hope for those
who might otherwise be forced to abandon their tree
farms due to the devastating effects of the disease.
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johnson -
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