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Trees of heaven on highway to hell

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One of the area’s most invasive species has a rather misleading name: Tree of heaven calls to mind a plant of ethereal — and even elusive — beauty.

But while few would call trees of heaven ugly, they are anything but elusive. Their broad-leaved limbs can be found drooping everywhere in the Verde Valley. Even with one’s eyes closed, trees of heaven can’t be avoided: The smell they exude has been variously described, falling somewhere between sweaty gym socks and rancid peanuts.

It’s what a tree of heaven does underground that really earns it its nastier nicknames: Widowmaker and tree of hell. The plant’s roots leach chemicals into the ground, killing off its neighbors, threatening species and reducing diversity.

Its continued existence is a real danger to native plants.

The Camp Verde Tree Advisory Council has a plan for the species — one its members carried out with lethal efficiency along Main Street Thursday, July 14.

“We pulled, cut or poisoned 40 trees of heaven,” council member Tony Gioia said.

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The process of eradication wasn’t complicated, but it was sweaty and smelly work. Members made short work of any tree of heaven under 6 feet tall, cutting the larger individuals down near the root and poisoning the stump, preventing it from doing what it would otherwise do so well: Resprouting, living on past a wound that would kill a less hardy tree.

The effort isn’t simply about removing a species that threatens native plants. Camp Verde is one of the few municipalities in the state to be designated a Tree City USA by the Arbor Day Foundation.

According to Gioia, the designation inspired the Camp Verde Tree Advisory Council to come up with a municipal urban forest plan, which includes a “palette” of appropriate native tree species to plant and maintain in the town’s various ecological zones.

For Gioia, the effort has far-reaching implications: Not only does discouraging invasive trees help native trees grow, it helps reduce the amount of water used. Native trees, on average, require less watering than invasive trees.

Zachary Jernigan

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