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Ice Storm Damages Trees
News release
issued January 9, 2001, effective immediately. For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org Pecan
Tree Damage Varied; Some Orchards Wiped Out ARDMORE,
Okla. The status of pecan groves and orchards in Southern Oklahoma and
North Central Texas ranges from unscathed to annihilated following the Christmas
ice storm, the worst in decades in many areas. Air temperature variations across
the region played a major role in determining the extent of damage. "In
the Ardmore area, most of the ice damage to pecan trees was to trees at a higher
elevation. Where most of the trees are located in creek or river bottoms, there
was little to no significant damage," explained Scott Landgraf, a pecan specialist
with the Ardmore-based Noble Foundation. Southward
where temperatures hovered at or slightly above freezing during the precipitation
periods ice accumulations were significantly less. In some areas near and
south of the Red River, no ice accumulations at all were reported. To
the north and east, however, the picture was vastly different. "Toward
Sulphur and Ada there seemed to be a more uniform heavy load of ice, causing considerable
limb destruction to all trees," Landgraf said. "Many of those trees
may not recover." Pecan
producers in the Idabel-Texarkana area reported complete destruction of their
orchards, according to Landgraf, and are planning to push out their trees and
start over. "Boots
Adams of the Bald Mountain Ranch in Eufaula had extreme damage," Landgraf
said. "He compared it to a bomb explosion." Based
on his conversations with pecan producers across the region, Landgraf said the
significant ice damage seemed to be concentrated in a zone from west of Ardmore
to west of Pauls Valley and eastward into Arkansas and northeast Texas, with the
worst damage from the Arbuckle Mountains eastward. "They
(producers) are very concerned about their upcoming crop this next year. They
feel like it will be severely limited by the effects of the ice. The effect of
the ice on next years crop is truly a valid concern because limbs that are
on the ground are actually the ones that would have borne the fruit for next year,"
Landgraf said Crops will
be limited on trees with severe limb breakage, Landgraf said, although there probably
will be pecans from those portions of the trees that remain intact. "It
would be very good to cut the limbs back to a smooth edge, but if thats
not possible, go ahead and tie onto those broken limbs and pull them out of the
tree," he explained. "Even though this process leaves a very jagged
break, it would be a lot less threatening. I recommend to people with severely
damaged trees to not fertilize this upcoming year because there will be plenty
of stimulation as a result of the breakage." Older
trees with breakage into the trunk itself are much more susceptible to disease
and insects. "One
should probably prepare to replace those trees with young trees this next spring,"
Landgraf said. "Even though they might not be taken out immediately, you
might go ahead and make plans to plant replacements." Trees
with good limb structure that escaped trunk damage but still suffered significant
limb breakage might not produce well for several years, Landgraf said.
"People who have severe damage
but not severe structural damage should plan to let those trees regenerate. This
regeneration process will allow growers to be back in pecan production much quicker
than the replacement process." he explained. "Growers with damaged pecan
trees should evaluate each tree independently." Landgraf
also noted that in many cases the trees that survived the early freeze damage
in October were the ones that were impacted most by the ice storm. It was a particularly
bad year of disasters for the pecan industry, he said. Pecan
producers who have specific questions can contact Landgraf at the Noble Foundation
(580-223-5810) or attend a free seminar and question-and-answer program scheduled
for Thursday, Jan. 11, at 7:00 p.m. in the Southern Oklahoma Technology Center
Auditorium in Ardmore. Additional
information on tree damage with illustrative photos can be accessed through the
Foundations web site at http://www.noble.org/Press_Release/Index.htm. ### See
also: Ice Damage Photos with Captions The
Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit
organization conducting agricultural, forage biotechnological, and plant biology
research; providing grants to numerous non-profit charitable, educational and
health organizations; and assisting farmers and ranchers through educational and
consultative agricultural programs. To
learn more, check out the Noble Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available
at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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