Insufficient watering killed 60% of trees in Montreal borough initiative - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 01:26 AM | Calgary | 6.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Insufficient watering killed 60% of trees in Montreal borough initiative

More than half of the trees planted in Montral-Nord as part of a green initiative since 2013 have died because of insufficient watering, the city's auditor general is reporting.

The trees, located in Montral-Nord, were planted to celebrate births in the area

From 2015 to 2021, the mortality rate of city trees in Montral-Nord was 20 per cent, according to the auditor general's report. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

About 60 per cent of young trees planted as part of a green initiative in Montral-Nord died because the borough didn't properly water them, according to the city's auditor general.

The trees were part of the city's Un enfant, un arbre (One child, one tree) initiative, which began in 2013. Citizens can apply to have a tree planted in their neighbourhood to celebrate the birth or adoption of a child.

The report, released Tuesday, said "a lack of sufficient watering" meant that 60 per cent of those trees, planted in public spaces in Montral-Nord, died, representing "a loss of both investment and benefits to the ecosystem."

The trees in the program weren't the only ones struggling. From 2015 to 2021, the annual mortality rate of city trees in Montral-Nord was20 per cent, the report said.

Last year, the mortality rate for young trees aloneremained high at15 per cent "primarily due to insufficient watering, especially during the periods of excessive heat in July 2021," it reads.

"In short, current practices [in Montreal] put the life expectancy of public trees at risk," it concluded.

Areas in need of green

The report noted that Montral-Nord didn't have a watering program for young trees until 2017.

Under its current plan, the borough waters newly planted trees weekly for two years. Saint-Lonard is the only borough audited who waters less than that, watering weeklybut only for the first year after planting.

In contrast, the city's park service, theService des grands parcs, du MontRoyal et des sports, waters young trees every two weeks for the first three years after planting.Saint-Laurent borough also waters every two weeks, for five years.

It's not the first time the lack of greeneryhas been noticed in areas like Montral-Nord.

A CBC News analysis of data from the City of Montreal and Statistics Canada shows the higher the median income of a neighbourhood, the more extensive the tree cover.

That's in part because boroughs with more valuable homes have more property tax revenue to plant and care for more trees.

That question of care is paramount, said Alain Paquette, a biological science professor at the Universit du Qubec Montral (UQAM) and urban forest researcher.

"We have to stop thinking that we will solve the problem by planting trees," he said. "We should take care of the ones we already have, which we don't."

Alain Paquette, a biological science professor at the Universit du Qubec Montral (UQAM) and urban forest researcher, said more needs to be done to take care of trees after they're planted. (Jessica Wu/CBC)

Paquette said trees need to be cared forafter they're planted to ensure they thrive, especially in an urban environment.Snow removal operations, or cyclists locking their bikes to trees, are both common problems that can damage a young sapling, he said.

But the issue isn't unique to Montral-Nord. Paquette said the quality of tree care varies widely from borough to borough.

"There's boroughs in the city, which are known for having people and policies who are really efficient, who are dedicated to this work. In others, it's not quite the case," he said.

City-wide recommendations

Taking into account the benefits of trees and how expensive a deadtrees can be to remove, "appropriate and sufficient maintenance" is essential both for the citizens who will benefit from the greenery, and the city that will shoulder the cost, the report said.

It recommends a city-wide standard defining "optimal maintenance practices" for the trees.

More specifically, it also recommended that eight boroughs Anjou, Montral-Nord, Rivire-des-PrairiesPointe-aux-Trembles, RosemontLa Petite-Patrie, Saint-Lonard, Saint-Laurent, Le Sud-Ouest and Ville-Marie work with the city's park service to commit toplans to better the care of their trees.

In a statement, the city of Montreal said it accepted the recommendations, and will work to develop its own maintenance guide in addition to helping boroughs create their tree plans.

With files from Radio-Canada's 15-18