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Ash dieback triggers hidden surge in carbon emissions from woodland soils, research shows
Ash dieback and other tree diseases are resulting in significantly more greenhouse gas emissions than previously thought because a large amount of carbon is escaping from woodland soils, a study has ...
Environment Secretary Owen Paterson has acknowledged that ash dieback is in the UK to stay. Since it was first confirmed at a Buckinghamshire nursery in March, the number of cases has slowly increased ...
Ash dieback is a severe disease that has substantially threatened European ash populations, particularly Fraxinus excelsior. The disease is caused by the invasive ascomycete fungus Hymenoscyphus ...
Ash dieback and other tree diseases are resulting in significantly more greenhouse gas emissions than previously thought because a large amount of carbon is escaping from woodland soils, a study has ...
Work has begun to remove infected trees in Coldean Woods near Brighton Urgent work to remove dead and diseased ash trees in a Brighton woodland is under way. Brighton & Hove City Council said: "We ...
Scientists at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and Queen Mary University of London have discovered that a new generation of ash trees, growing naturally in woodland, exhibits greater resistance to the ...
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