(Chelsea Update would like to thank Cheryl Nelson for the information in this story.)
During the period between April 15 and July 15, beetles actively carry spores of fungus from tree to tree, meaning oak trees are at high risk for infection with oak wilt.
Oak trees with wounds in their bark are susceptible to the disease, which can weaken white oaks and kill red oaks within a few weeks.
“Oak trees should not be pruned between April 15 and July 15. These pruning guidelines can help keep infection from spreading,” said Simeon Wright, forest health specialist in the DNR’s Forest Resources Division in a press release.
“Once a tree is infected there is no cure. Without expensive treatments the disease spreads to other trees and may in time kill all nearby oaks,” he said.
If you have an oak tree that gets damaged during the high-risk period from April 15 to July 15, immediately cover all wounds with tree-wound paint or latex-based paint. Painting tree wounds is not recommended for other trees species as it can reduce the effectiveness of the healing process.
Besides being carried by the nitidulid beetle, which is active in spring and early summer, oak wilt also can spread from tree to tree through roots that are grafted, or grown together underground. Spores also can be carried long distances to living trees when you move firewood cut from an infected tree and beetles pick up the spores.
Oak wilt can kill some oaks within weeks.
First identified in the Midwest during the 1940s, oak wilt was confirmed in Michigan in the early 1950s and now is common in the Lower Peninsula. Trees in the red oak family are most susceptible to the disease. These include black oak, northern red oak and northern pin oak — all have leaves with pointed tips.
Trees in the white oak group have rounded leaf edges and include white oak, swamp white oak, and bur oak. These trees are better able to block spread of the disease through the entire tree, preventing rapid death.
Symptoms of oak wilt most often appear from late June until September. Affected trees will suddenly begin to wilt from the top down, rapidly dropping leaves, which can be green, brown or a combination of both colors.
Left untreated, oak wilt will continue to move from tree to tree through grafted root systems, killing more red oak over an increasingly large area when oaks grow close together.
As more trees die from oak wilt, more fungal spores are produced, which allows the beetle to carry the infection to new locations.
Firewood cut from infected trees can harbor the fungus, so don’t move firewood from one place to another. If you suspect your firewood is infected by oak wilt, you can help slow the spread by burning it, chipping it or debarking it before April. Once the firewood has been dried for longer than a year and/or all the bark loosens, the firewood can no longer spread oak wilt.
To minimize the risk of oak wilt infection caused by logging damage, the DNR restricts cutting of red oak trees on state land between April 15 and July 15. The DNR recommends private forest landowners exercise caution during this period and, whenever possible, delay harvests in oak forests until after July 15.
If you suspect a tree has oak wilt:
Report infections using an interactive map.
Contact a local DNR forest health specialist for more information or to ask a question.
Michigan State University’s Diagnostic Clinic also can verify oak wilt infection. Find instructions online or call 517-355-4536.
Get help from an oak-wilt qualified specialist.
Visit michiganoakwilt.org for a listing and more information.Learn more about oak wilt and other invasive species in the state.