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Near the bottom of a shady hillside in Jericho, a lone beech tree stretches high into the canopy, a relic of a bygone forest.
Through luck or (hopefully) genetics, this mighty tree has avoided contracting beech bark disease—a fatal fungal pathogen that has proven deadly to mature beech trees. And it stands just outside a hotspot where a new pathogen called beech leaf disease (BLD) is spreading across Vermont forests.
“Beech leaf disease is really scary because if it impacts those trees then we are losing our future seed sources,” Wikle said.
BLD first emerged in the United States in Ohio about a decade ago, likely by way of infected nursery stock from Asia, and has steadily expanded across eastern forests. Five counties in Vermont have confirmed outbreaks with the Jericho Research Forest as its northernmost point. That is why one morning in late June, Wikle and two UVM forestry interns met with scientists from Vermont’s Department of Forests, Parks & Recreation to map new infections.
“We don’t know how beech leaf disease is spreading,” explained Savannah Ferreira, a forest pathologist for the state. “The leading hypothesis is that it’s wind—which is not good.”
Last spring, Wikle was doing trail maintenance in the Jericho Research Forest when she reached for a branch and saw dark striping on a leaf—the telltale first sign of beech leaf disease.
“When you see it it’s a very distinctive symptom,” she said.
The disease is caused by a microscopic nematode that destroys the mesophyll layer in leaves where photosynthesis occurs. It becomes a chronic condition that deforms the leaf structure, gradually starving trees to death.
“When it showed up on the research forest I was like ‘This is terrible!’” Wikle said. “But also, if [beech leaf disease] could be anywhere at least it’s here and we can study it.”
She and a team of UVM students mapped the extent of the outbreak last fall with state and federal foresters, including Cameron McIntire, a plant pathologist with the U.S. Forest Service in New Hampshire. He collected leaf litter and soil samples to measure the rate of infection spread over time and to determine if the nematode is present in soils before visual symptoms occur in trees.
The Forest Service has monitored the progression of beech leaf disease for years and funds research projects to identify potential treatment and control methods for trees in landscaped and forested settings. While some interventions have shown promise such as fertilizer applications and injections, these are not scalable for forest stands—at least, not yet. But despite an uncertain prognosis, McIntire is not giving up on beech trees.
“We know very little about how BLD will affect long-term survival,” he wrote in an email. “It appears that American beech has very little natural resistance to BLD, and human intervention may be necessary to ensure healthy forests into the future.”
Mapping the spread
The untrained eye can easily miss detecting beech leaf disease. Sometimes only a single leaf on a branch will show banding. But pruning trees is not necessarily a viable management option.
“The nematodes are not visible to the human eye,” Wikle said. “So just because you don’t see it doesn’t mean they aren’t there.”
She worries the disease will be problematic in places such as northern Vermont where beech is the only masting tree that produce large quantities of nuts for species like bear, deer, and turkey across northern New England.
“So many trees have succumbed to forest pests, I wish I could have seen these forests 100 years ago,” Wikle said.
Finding trees that show resistance to emerging biological threats is key to their survival.
Humans have transformed American forests for centuries as both Indigenous populations and early settlers shaped the landscape depending on their needs. Sometimes, our actions had unintended effects. In the early 1900s, an invasive blight disappeared most of the American chestnut from eastern forests. Global trade accelerated the pace of change as new invasive pests and pathogens have reduced the presence of elms and hemlocks. Once invasive species are released in new environments, they can be nearly impossible to stop.
In the late 1800s, beech bark disease arrived in Nova Scotia and slowly expanded throughout Northeast forests. By the 1960s it was prevalent in Vermont. The disease is caused by infestations of a tiny scale insect that introduces a fungal infection to the vascular tissue of the tree. The once smooth beech bark gains a pock-marked appearance. While the disease progresses slowly, estimates suggest between 50 and 90 percent of mature beech eventually die from it.
Managing infected forests
People notice when wildfire wipes out a forest. But beech trees can live for years after becoming infected with beech leaf disease. This lag time can reduce the sense of urgency to the problem, explained Tony D’Amato, professor of forestry in the Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources and director of the forestry program.
But this slow-moving killer also buys scientists a chance to learn about it and develop management plans. For instance, should we plant additional varieties of masting trees to support wildlife? Do we wait for beech survivors that have natural resistance to emerge? Do we double efforts to find treatments?
D’Amato studies adaptation strategies for forests in a time of rapid change because many forests are warming significantly faster than trees can naturally expand their range through seed dispersal. D’Amato’s projects involve testing assisted migration efforts such as planting species just beyond their historic range or to new sites within their existing range to study how they fare as the world warms.
We often look at trying to create redundancy to maintain forest function, said D’Amato. Diverse forests are more resilient when disturbances occur and by eastern standards, Vermont’s forests are diverse with over 30 tree species.
“We are lucky we already have a deck with more than two cards in it,” D’Amato said. As beech leaf disease spreads, he cautioned against taking action simply to do something. This is the time “to monitor and learn as much as we can,” he said. “No tree is immune to a chain saw.”
Zooming in on the problem
The tiny nematode behind this giant mess remains something of a mystery. Scientists have found the nematode can survive under snowpack, and it has been found inside insects, bird droppings, and spore traps. While it increasingly appears that the nematode is transported by wind and water, it may travel outside the advancing front by birds or on the bottom of a hiker’s shoe. Nick Aflitto, an assistant professor of forest health at UVM, aims to better understand this microscopic menace.
Nematodes don’t have great vision or acoustic signaling abilities, Aflitto said.
Learning how this species of nematode uses chemical signaling to find beech trees in the forest may also help stop them. Aflitto studies sensiochemical signaling such as the pheromones ants emit when they find a food source. Depending on the signature, compounds can greenlight a route or act as warning signs to danger ahead. Plants do this too.
Think of the smell of mown grass—Alflitto explained. Leaves munched by animals or insects produce a scent for other plants nearby to raise their defense systems.
“There is huge potential for using it for invasive species,” he said. “But we need to be able to detect them first.”
In the spring, Aflitto began attaching small rubber traps soaked in chemical compounds to diseased beech trees to attract the nematode and learn more about its behavior. His lab uses artificial intelligence to predict new biocontrols that may fast track the development of control methods for emerging forest pests.
“We have been manipulating the odorscape for a long time,” Aflitto said. “It does work.”
Using chemical compounds to attract or deter invasive species carries less risk of off-target effects than using biological controls such as introducing another species to an ecosystem to eat the invasive one.
“While we are getting better at it, we’ve seen that go wrong time and time again,” Aflitto said.
Holding out hope
When the emerald ash borer first emerged, it was alarming because of how little scientists knew about the problem, Feirrera said. “But now we have biocontrols for it; we have chemical controls for it. We know how to manage ash in the forest. We know that there are lingering naturally resistant ash trees. I think it’s going to be kind of shocking when we get this first wave of [beech leaf disease] spreading, but I am staying hopeful that we are going to learn a lot in the next couple of years.”
There are bright spots. Vermont was the last New England state to report beech leaf disease. There may be protective factors scientists haven’t uncovered yet. And while historically, beech is not a beloved tree for its economic benefits, beech has a high ecological value.
“They have their own network of mushrooms and wildlife that depend on them,” Feirrera said. “It does feel like a lot of doom and gloom, but there are a lot of eyes looking at this pest. I am staying hopeful that there is lingering beech.”

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Categories: Outdoors, Press Release








I lost my beech trees to this leaf disease several years ago, it also attacks butternut trees
Maybe I’m wrong, or maybe it’s just coincidental but, it seems to me that most of the newer invasive species that are infecting our ecosystem in North America today come from Asia . Am I wrong ?
You are not wrong. In fact, just about anything that is invasive and tries to kill or ruin us comes from Asia
No, it must be that whoever names the pest and identifies the source is an anti-Asian racist. They need to get with the times and start blaming Israel for any pestilence.
Call me paranoid or a conspiracy theorist but what better way is there to damage a country’s health and economy than to introduce pathogens to its forests, population, or livestock ( IE covid? Or the Asian longhorn ticks that we now have in the US Killing livestock and making us sick?) The list goes on and is growing.
It can take years to spread and become noticed.. and if it was intentionally released it could never be proven. Seems like a good way to start a war and never have to actually fight it.
Maybe it’s something or maybe it’s just more of the ski is falling. I remember activists had their undies in a knot 50 years ago about how Vermont’s mountains were going to be denuded by the year 2000 by the Hemlock Wooly Adelgid. Is that still a thing or has it gone the way of acid rain?