Newport leaders vote to tear out trees
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June Casagrande
CORONA DEL MAR -- The 114 diseased Canary Island date palm trees that
have long contributed to the character of Marguerite Avenue will be
removed and replaced with king palms, the City Council decided Tuesday.
The news is upsetting to residents who wanted larger, more mature
trees to take their place. But city officials argued that young king
palms, which will be 8 to 10 feet high when they are planted along the
avenue, are the only affordable option.
The young king palms will cost the city $900 each. More mature trees
would cost about $2,500 each.
“The people living in this area and people like myself are sorry to
see these big palms go,” said City Councilman Dennis O’Neil, whose
district includes Marguerite in Corona del Mar. “To replace them with
fully mature trees is very expensive.”
The Canary Island date palm trees, located in the parkways on
Marguerite, have long been known to be victim to fusarium wilt, a disease
that will eventually kill the trees. The city selected the king palms as
the best replacement in part because they are resistant to disease.
Trees affected by fusarium wilt can often be identified by the fact
that their fronds die in abnormal patterns, such as when all the fronds
on one side die sooner than those on the other side of the tree.
In 1997, tests showed the Marguerite trees were infected with the
disease. An attempt to cure them in 1998 failed. To limit the spread of
the contagious disease, which was first identified in this tree species
in California in 1927, crews have used sterile pruning techniques. There
is no cure for the disease and no way to stop it from spreading except by
removing the trees.
“They’re a historical landmark identifying that particular area in
Corona del Mar. They’re beautiful,” O’Neil said. “To see these removed
is emotional and upsetting. Replacing them with a much smaller tree is
not acceptable to some in the community. The fact is that the trees have
to come out. It’s a reality that they have a disease and they can’t be
cured. The city can’t afford to replace them with fully mature trees.”
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