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- Oak tree bark cracked and peeling off - Ask Extension
I have a 10-year old live oak that looks healthy but the bark is cracking and separating from the tree The tree forks and one fork is fine but the other fork has cracked bark all over
- cracking fruit tree bark, pears, cherry, persimmon, apples #297523
Bark splitting can occur in response to various environmental factors at different times of the year Splits can occur on the trunk of the tree as well as on branches Trees that are most susceptible to this type of injury are those with thin bark, such as certain fruit trees Newly planted trees or young trees are more prone to bark splitting Bark splits are not likely to be fatal to trees
- How to repair tree damage caused by deer - Ask Extension
Our 5" in diamater maple tree was ravaged by deer antler rubbing It is on one side of the tree, bark is shredded in approx 1 4 of the trunk How best to help the tree heal?
- Is my Eastern Red Bud dying?! - Ask Extension
Regarding the shedding of bark: Shedding or peeling bark is a characteristic of the redbud tree, as well as the silver maple, sycamore, shagbark, birch, hickory and Scotch pine, according to Iowa State University Extension As the redbud tree matures, the inner bark layer thickens, which results in the bark being pushed outward as the tree grows
- Bark stripping on maple tree - Ask Extension
Sometimes a maple or other hardwoods can drop bark As long as there’s healthy bark underneath the peeling layers, your tree is OK But if you see these other signs, your tree needs a bit more help: Bark falls off after frost, which usually happens on the tree’s south or southwest side Any sudden swing in temperature can make trees shed bark and crack under stress Bark falls off after
- red maple shedding its bark - Ask Extension
In younger trees, the outside bark is generally softer and more flexible and can accommodate the growth But older trees with harder bark will crack and split, and sometimes, the bark delaminates from the tree trunk, revealing the inner layer below This process is known as exfoliation It tends to occur at the same time every year
- Large bees eating river birch - Ask Extension
Those are European Hornets They strip bark from river birch and other preferred trees (such as lilac) to make their nests and obtain nourishment from the sap They make their nests in a cavity, such as a hollow tree or wall void that is about 6 feet or more above the ground Their nests are difficult to locate They rarely make suspended, football-shaped nests like bald-faced hornets Mature
- sycamore shedding more than usual - Ask Extension
Our one sycamore is shedding bark more than usual We are concerned that the tree is stressed Any advice is appreciated
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