Thursday, May 19, 2011

First Slime Flux Sample of the Year Arrives in Clinic

Slime flux on white oak
(Photo by: Randy Cyr, Bugwood)
The first slime flux sample of the season was sent to the clinic today, as a digital image from a Raleigh homeowner.  This is a problem we usually associate with the warmest months of the year. Slime flux is a foul-smelling and unsightly seepage of sap from the trunk of shade trees.  Slime flux occurs in apple, birch, elm, hemlock, maple, mulberry, oak, poplar, and willow.  In North Carolina, slime flux is quite common in the landscape on large, mature oaks, tulip poplars, and elms. In oaks, the fluxing usually occurs on the lower portion of the trunk, close to the ground.

The underlying cause of slime flux is a condition called wet wood, which develops when bacteria ferment the sap within the wood. These bacteria enter through wounds, usually in the roots. The affected wood turns dark and appears water soaked.  As the sap is fermented, methane and carbon dioxide gases can be produced. If the internal pressure from the gas becomes great enough, the fermented sap seeps out of cracks or wounds and down the bark. The flux is colorless to tan at first, but darkens upon exposure to the air.  As fluxing continues, large areas of the bark can become soaked. 

Many different microorganisms grow in the flux, which results in a foul or alcoholic smell.  Various types of insects, including bees, wasps and butterflies, are commonly attracted to it.

Some dieback may occur in severely affected trees, but often the fluxing stops after several weeks or months with no apparent damage to the tree. The slime flux may be triggered by heat, drought, or other stresses, so try to maintain good growing conditions.  There is no curative treatment for slime flux, but it will do no harm to remove loose bark over the area. Wet wood and slime flux are one more reason to avoid causing wounds to tree roots.


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