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Topic Summary

Posted by: callan
« on: March 24, 2016, 12:41:32 am »

Πιο βλάκας πεθαίνεις!
Posted by: mistermax
« on: March 23, 2016, 11:12:09 pm »



Αχ, ash tree, ποσοι ιππότες ξεκουραστηκαν στην σκιά σου; πόσοι γοτθοι αλληλοσκοτώθηκαν κάτω απο την πλουσια φυλλοσιά σου...Πόσες ξανθες νεραϊδες έκαναν σεξ πρώτη φορα (απο βιασμο) πίσω απο τον κορμό σου με παλλικάρια της Αριας φυλής;

Το βρωμόδεντρο λοιπον τελειώνει απο την ευρώπη, αναγγέλοντας το τέλος καθε τι λευκου σε αυτη την ηπειρό.

Ετοιμαστείτε για το καλυτερο τελος, το τελος ΟΛΩΝ ΣΑΣ! Καλό ψόφο!

Quote
Ash tree set for extinction in Europe
By Claire Marshall BBC Environment Correspondent

    23 March 2016
    From the section Science & Environment 606 comments

Image copyright PA
Image caption The chalara dieback has devastated ash trees across Europe

The ash tree is likely to be wiped out in Europe, according to a review of the evidence.

The trees are being killed off by the fungal disease ash-dieback along with an invasive beetle called the emerald ash borer.

According to the research, published in the Journal of Ecology, the British countryside will never look the same again.

The paper says that the ash will most likely be "eliminated" in Europe.

This could mirror the way Dutch elm disease largely wiped out the elm in the 1980s.

Warning over ash dieback disease

100,000 trees destroyed over disease

How to spot ash dieback

Ash trees are a key part of the treescape of Britain. You don't have to go to the countryside to see them. In and around towns and cities there are 2.2 million. In woodland, only the oak is more common.

However, according to a review led by Dr Peter Thomas of Keele University and published in the Journal of Ecology, "between the fungal disease ash dieback and a bright green beetle called the emerald ash borer, it is likely that almost all ash trees in Europe will be wiped out - just as the elm was largely eliminated by Dutch elm disease".

Ash dieback, also known as Chalara, is a disease that was first seen in Eastern Europe in 1992. It now affects more than 2 million sq km, from Scandinavia to Italy


...


http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-35876621
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