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PEI

Last chance until 2026 to ensure future of black ash trees

Black ash trees only produce seeds every seven years and 2019is the year. Now, The Canadian Forest Service National Tree Seed Centre is hoping Canadians will help find someseeds.

National organization collecting black ash seeds to preserve species

'Black ash seeds should be ready by mid-September,' says Donnie McPhee, co-ordinator for the Canadian Forest Service National Tree Seed Centre. (Angela Bosse/CBC)

Black ash trees only produce seeds every seven years and 2019is the year. Now, The Canadian Forest Service National Tree Seed Centre is hoping Canadians will help find someseeds.

The seed centre has two main purposes:to provide seed fromalltree species in Canada for research and conserve seedsin casedisease or pests such as the emerald ash borer destroythe tree population, said seedcentre co-ordinator Donnie McPhee.

The plan is to conserve black ash seeds, "until such a time that we can either out-plant again or with new technologies that we can inoculate our seed against the particular pest problem," McPhee said.

The emerald ash borerhas not yet been spotted on the Island, but was found in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia in 2018.It is one of the main reasons the seed centre is asking people to preserve the four-centimetreseeds that are enclosed in a flat green wing.

"Right now emerald ash borer isn't on Prince Edward Island, but two years ago Quebec City was the closest place to the Maritimesand now there are two locations in New Brunswick and one in Nova Scotia," McPhee said.

The emerald ash borer hasn't been spotted on P.E.I., but there have been confirmed sightings in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. (David Cappaert/Michigan State University)

Black ash is a slender tree with grey bark and multiple leaflets that turn yellow in the fall and the emerald ash borer has taken a toll on these trees in some parts of Canada.

McPhee said given seeding happens so infrequently, if the bug took a trip to the Island it could have a major negative impact.

However, McPhee said it is not quite time to collect seeds yet.

"Things aren't ripe yet and if you collect them too early the seed isn't any good, but coming up soon black ash seeds should be ready by mid-September."

If people see wild ash seeds, such as the white ash pictured growing on P.E.I., they can contact the seed centre and someone will assist them with collection, McPhee says. (Angela Bosse/CBC)

White, green and black ash trees are native to P.E.I., but McPhee said the focus is on black ash because it seeds less frequently.

If people see seed on wild ash trees growing on P.E.I. they can contact the seed centre and someone will assist them with collection, McPhee said.

"We need about 2,000 to 3,000 seed per tree," McPhee said.

Ash seeds turn brown once they have matured. (Submitted by Natural Resources Canada)

The seed centre is collaborating with the province to assist in gathering seeds.

McPhee said his team is small, with only three people covering the entire country.

More P.E.I. news

With files from Island Morning