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The Rural Voice, 1999-02, Page 12"Our experience assures lower cost water wells" 99 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontario Water Well Associations • Farm • Industrial • Suburban • Municipal Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. WINGHAM Serving Ontario Since 1900 519-357-1960 WINGHAM 519-664-1424 WATERLOO CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED Now Available WOOL ADVANCE PAYMENTS 300 per pound Skirted Fleeces Well -Packed Sacks For more information contact: WINGHAM WOOL DEPOT John Farrell R.R. 2, Wingham, Ontario Phone/Fax 519-357-1058 8 THE RURAL VOICE Scrap Book Help for one tree pest but another arrives Rural Ontario's landscape has been dominated by two stately tree varieties since pioneer days: the American elm and the sugar maple. The elms were devastated by an earlier invasion and a now new pest threatens the maples. Some remaining elms may get protection from the work of a University of Toronto researcher who has spent 22 years seeking a solution to the problem of Dutch elm disease. When the fungus, carried by the elm bark beetle, struck Ontario in the 1960s, it killed millions of trees and changed the look of towns, cities and rural countryside alike. "The elm is the most beautifully shaped tree in the North American landscape," says forest pathologist Martin Hubbes. After decades of dead -ends and disappointments, Hubbes finally perfected the equivalent of a vaccine against Dutch elm disease. Earlier tests in more than a dozen cities indicatcd his research was on the right track and a trial this spring on about 300 elms in Kingston showed the vaccine could protect trees. A chemical -filled pellet no bigger than a cigarette filter, is inserted in a shallow drill hole in the bark just before the leaf buds open. However, while urban homeowners may find the new vaccine worthwhile, it may not be practical for rural landowners. The Toronto company seeking approval to market the pellets says it must be administered yearly and says the vaccine will initially cost "less than 550". Meanwhile a new invader from China is threatening the future of the maple trees that are the most common sight in Ontario and which provide a huge economic benefit through both lumber and maple syrup sales. In June 1998 a live adult Asian long -horn beetle was found in a warehouse in Waterloo. The beetle is thought to have arrived in a shipment originating from China where the beetle is a native species. Portions of the same shipment were sent to seven other locations in southern Ontario. While inspection of other sites found no live beetles, there were bore holes and sawdust in crating materials. The insect had earlier been found in New York and Chicago. The insect attacks and kills healthy trees and has no known natural enemies in Canada. Not just maples but most broadleaf trees including poplars, sycamores, elms, willows, cherries and various fruit trees are susceptible. No practical insecticide treatment exists. Adults feed on leaves andbark of tender shoots of the trees. Mature larvae bore into the tree and create large, winding galleries in the inner wood, eventually killing the host. Adults chew their way out of the wood, creating large, circular exit holes.° —Sources, Toronto Star and Natural Resource Canada bulletin Study says organic farming cuts emissions Crops grown with organic fertilizer produce equivalent yields but much less carbon dioxide than crops grown with chemical fertilizers, according to a 15 - year -long study by the Rodalc Institute in Pennsylvania. "This is important because right now we are facing a problem with CO2 and the potential impacts on climate and we are in the process of signing a treaty and trying to work with other countries on a global scale," said Laurie Drinkwater of the Rodale Institute. In a letter published in the science journal Nature, November 18, the researchers said if organic fertilizer (either manure or a variety of legumes) is used in the major com/soybean growing regions of the United States, the annual carbon dioxide in the atmosphere could be reduced by an estimated two per cent. In addition to producing Tess CO2, the study found organic farming also uses 50 per cent Tess energy than conventional farming methods.° — Source: Reuters News Agency