Greg_L
Participating member
- Location
- Bloomington, IN
I'm dealing with what's becoming a massive problem on a college campus. We have fox squirrels *everywhere* out here, and they have, over the past three years or so, begun chewing on the bark of trees. They have now fully girdled hundreds of limbs and outright killed dozens of trees. One of my co-workers likened it to a disease, saying "If we had a fungus or a bug that was doing this kind of damage this fast, we'd be in full panic mode."
...but since they're squirrels, and the students on campus have made them an Instagram page with over 14k followers, we have to approach the situation carefully.
We have over 15,000 inventoried trees on campus, with many dating from the 1800s and a few pushing 200 years. We've got to do something, but pulling out pellet rifles isn't just bad PR, it's illegal within our city limits.
So what I need from you, the hive mind, here is information. I'm open to mitigation suggestions too, but is anyone else seeing damage like this? Has anyone had any success with dealing with the root issue? If we're going to pitch any of our mitigation solutions higher up the chain, we're going to have to be able to explain why they're chewing on the trees. Anyone know anything? This is in the midwestern United States, and their chief targets seem to be Oaks, Locusts, Beeches, and Hackberry. I've got Oaks that are pushing 15 years old/10" dbh that are suddenly dead from ten feet high all the way up through the tips.
...but since they're squirrels, and the students on campus have made them an Instagram page with over 14k followers, we have to approach the situation carefully.
We have over 15,000 inventoried trees on campus, with many dating from the 1800s and a few pushing 200 years. We've got to do something, but pulling out pellet rifles isn't just bad PR, it's illegal within our city limits.
So what I need from you, the hive mind, here is information. I'm open to mitigation suggestions too, but is anyone else seeing damage like this? Has anyone had any success with dealing with the root issue? If we're going to pitch any of our mitigation solutions higher up the chain, we're going to have to be able to explain why they're chewing on the trees. Anyone know anything? This is in the midwestern United States, and their chief targets seem to be Oaks, Locusts, Beeches, and Hackberry. I've got Oaks that are pushing 15 years old/10" dbh that are suddenly dead from ten feet high all the way up through the tips.













