Nova Scotia

All ash trees to be removed from Bedford park due to insect infestation

Beginning Monday, Halifax Regional Municipality will begin to remove 80 ash trees from a park in Bedford. Many of the trees are dead or in poor condition due to damage caused by the emerald ash borer, a beetle that feeds on the species.

80 ash trees to be removed over the next 3-4 weeks

A sign reading "Admiral Harry DeWolf Park" is seen in front of tress in Bedford, N.S.
All of the ash trees at Bedford's DeWolf Park will be removed starting Monday. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

Halifax Regional Municipality will begin to remove 80 ash trees from DeWolf Park in Bedford starting Monday.

Many of the trees are dead or in poor condition due to damage caused by the emerald ash borer, a beetle that feeds on the species.

"Unfortunately, all the ash trees here are infested and about 75 per cent of them are completely dead already," said Kevin Osmond, HRM's senior supervisor of urban forestry. "Twenty-five per cent of them are still showing some signs of life with some leaves on them, but they are already infested."

This is not a new problem for the park that is located on the shore of Bedford Basin. The insects were were first detected there four years ago.

An ash tree in Bedford park is seen with a large chunk of its bark stripped away.
Three-quarters of the ash trees are dead and the rest are in poor shape. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

Tree removal and stump grinding is expected to take 3-4 weeks. The trees will be replaced by other species over time.

"It is on the move up through Bedford but we haven't found it anywhere else in HRM yet," Osmond said of the emerald ash borer. "Once it is into an area, it is impossible to eradicate."

The emerald ash borer is native to northeastern Asia. Once a tree is infested with beetle larvae, the tree declines quickly, typically dying within three years.

A hole in one of the ash trees at DeWolf Park made by an Emerald Ash Borer.
A hole made by an emerald ash borer is shown in one of the trees at DeWolf Park. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Paul Palmeter is an award-winning video journalist born and raised in the Annapolis Valley. He has covered news and sports stories across Nova Scotia for 30 years.