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Talkback: Leaf miner
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There is a horse chestnut at my children's school gates in Jersey that is brown, with crisp leaves falling, when it should still be green, with fat conkers falling and being discovered with joy by the children. The tree has provided us with shade from the sun and rain, the children play around the trunk, and I can't be the only one thrilled each spring with the dramatic way it comes back to life from its winter dormancy. Hearing that this tree was being attacked by leaf miners and would probably die really disturbed me. It's more than just a plant, it is such a part of the school community.
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When it first arrived in the UK in the 1960s there were great worries that it would destroy all the acorns on Quercus robur, since heavy infestations appear to leave no single acorn 'true'. But the oaks are still producing fruit and there is no sign of them failing to produce offspring. Oak trees are very long-lived organisms and are able to suffer many years of galls, acorn feeders and other 'pests'. Keep a look out for the next 2 decades and you will see some years are good for galls, others good for acorns.