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These Norfolk Island Pines Trees were healthy 18 months ago

Look at them now. Dropping needles.
They are in a reticulated park so it cannot be drought stress.



This is how they should look.
These ones are less than a kilometre away

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sp1dwoOfe221 · 36-40, M
well, if those trees were planted as clones then it does leave them susceptible to the same diseases & parasites....similar thing happened in NA throughout many cities a while back with nursery elms planted as landscaping trees being prone to dutch elm disease.

get well soon, anyhow
Picklebobble2 · 56-60, M
I wonder if that's a parasitic thing.

Bugs; mould spores blown in on the wind.

Something called ash dieback is affecting trees in the UK
Gusman · 61-69, M
I done a bit of research and it appears that the culprit is the fungal disease Neofusicoccum parvum, colloquially known as the "top-down" disease because it kills the branches at the top of the tree first.
This is occurring all along the Perth coastal suburbs.
As well as the east coast - Sydney/Brisbane and the rest.
Nothing can be done to save the trees.
They will all be removed eventually and new ones planted
greencompass · 36-40, F
Never seen such bare evergreens. Wonder what's caused all that..
Gusman · 61-69, M
@greencompass I done a bit of research and it appears that the culprit is the fungal disease Neofusicoccum parvum, colloquially known as the "top-down" disease because it kills the branches at the top of the tree first.
This is occurring all along the Perth coastal suburbs.
As well as the east coast - Sydney/Brisbane and the rest.
Nothing can be done to save the trees.
They will all be removed eventually and new ones planted.
scorpiolovedeep · 51-55, M
Is it the white stuff on the trees?@Gusman
Gusman · 61-69, M
@scorpiolovedeep No, the white you see is the dead ends of the branches. Totally dried out.

 
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