Lichen Survey of Ash Pollards at Low Bridge End Farm, St. John’s in the Vale.
John Douglas
Red List of Fraxinus
Megan Barstow, Sara Oldfield, Murphy Westwood,Diana Jerome, Emily Beech & Malin Rivers
Ecological impacts of ash dieback and mitigation methods
Ruth Mitchell
Plant and soil research scientist with the Hutton Institute, specialising in above and below ground biodiversity and habitat restoration. Most recently this has focussed on ash dieback, and the species that are most clearly associated with ash, as well as the unique ecological functions of ash.
Alice Broome
Specialist in woodland ecology and rate species conservation. Most recently assessing the potential ecological impact on ash dieback on Uk woodlands and species, and investigating possible solutions which might be achieved through woodland management.
JNCC Report No. 483
The potential ecological impact of ash dieback in the UK
Invertebrates identified from samples collected from flight interceptor traps set in ash pollards at sites in Borrowdale in 2014
Stephen Hewitt
April 2017
Silvicultural strategies for Fraxinus excelsior in response to dieback caused by Hymenoscyphus fraxineus
Management responses to ash dieback (Hymenoscyphus fraxineus) in woodland: implications for woodland structure and resources for biodiversity
Robert J. Fuller
Veteran Ash Tree locations In Cumbria
Ash Dieback (Hymenoscyphus fraxineus) Experience from continental Europe
Joe Alsop reviews what the UK can learn from the spread and effects of ash dieback in woodlands on the Continent.
Risk Assessing for the Likely Loss of Ash
Joe Alsop and Emma Goldberg present a methodology for risk assessing the likely loss of ash as a woodland component, and the associated impacts on canopy cover, ecosystem integrity and continuity of woodland conditions, as a result of ash dieback.
FRAXBACK
The outputs from the EU Cost project on FRAXBACK are freely available at:
Special issue of Baltic forestry:
https://www.balticforestry.mi.lt/bf/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&catid=14&id=482
A book:
https://www.slu.se/globalassets/ew/org/inst/mykopat/forskning/stenlid/dieback-of-european-ash.pdf
These contain a lot of the work and local knowledge from around Europe on ash dieback
The AshEcol spreadsheet of ash associated species can be found at
http://publications.naturalengland.org.uk/publication/5273931279761408
This also has instructions on how to use the excel file and the full case studies for all 15 sites
Evidence from mortality dating of Fraxinus excelsior indicates ash dieback (Hymenoscyphus fraxineus) was active in England in 2004–2005
https://academic.oup.com/forestry/advance-article/doi/10.1093/forestry/cpx059/4958744