Notes from Tree Risk Assessment Qualification (TRAQ) class taught by Kevin Eckert for the Arizona Community Tree Council. October 2022
About 25 people are killed each year by falling trees in U.S.
Removal should only be an option when mitigations are not sustainable. We have an ethical obligation to do no harm. The benefits of trees are important.
A risk is meaningless without a time frame.
Imminent - if a tear in the tree is weathered, the failure is not Imminent
Probable - failure would likely occur during normal (expected/seasonal) extreme weather.
Possible - failure would likely occur during abnormal (hurricane, tornado, derecho, etc) extreme weather.
Wounds
Thicker sap trees tend to compartmentalize better
If sap is oozing, touch and smell it:
Sticky = ok, its sap
Sour = bacteria
Slimy or foamy = fungus
Wet = just water
Drought
Tree dying from bottom up is over-irrigation
Tree dying from top down is drought (under-irrigation)
Failure
Soil failure vs root failure: roots in air or roots break and stay in ground
Codominant is not a fault.
Included bark is a fault because weak area doesn't hold stems.
Aspect ratio near 1:1 for codom stems is a fault because don't have enough wood to wrap around union. This is common cause of failure in pines, especially CA fire investigations.
Decay
Worse on compression side and at the base. Hollow poles are strong. Most stress in tree is around the shell, so sapwood carries most weight, not heartwood (which is more brittle).
Heartwood - least concern
Sapwood - will start seeing tip dieback. 2nd worst.
Root - will also see tip dieback. Not too bad if not structural; crown dieback will balance root dieback.
Basal - worst.
Types of Response growth:
Reaction wood from tension/compression
Flexure wood from movement
Wound wood - e.g. lip around wound. More growth shows more stress
Likelihood of failure increases/decreases based on load (e.g. wind exposure) / response growth
Stress
Reproduction is sign of stress in trees (plants): orchard trees cut to fruit more, but decreases lifespan.
Vigor/health does not always reduce tree failure risk
Adding N can increase leaf area and stem elongation, but that can increase load on stem and if stem doesn't thicken then can increase tree failure risk, even while increasing tree "vigor". Sometimes reducing growth (ie use growth regulator) can improve mitigations.
Sheer plane: where tension and compression meet
Cracks: transverse (fiber failure) or longitudinal (with the grain)
Age
Old trees: retrenchment = natural process of aging, shortening and widening = more stable
Trees naturally move with wind. Mass damping shows importance of inner branches and leaves. Helps tree stems "undulate like snake in the wind". Sharp bends or lack of inner leaf area can inhibit natural movement.
Construction
New concrete can leach lime/calcium oxate which raises soil pH and can harm some plants if too much
Adventitious branches = "water sprouts" (from topping = non ANSI cuts) = epicormic. Poor attachments can rip out.
Shigo said: "don't err on the side of safety….just do it right!" :: Do the best you can based on your education, training, and experience.
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