Drought and moths push the trees of Vancouver’s Stanley Park to the brink
VANCOUVER — First came the moths. Then came the drought.
The trees of Stanley Park, typically the green jewel of Vancouver’s downtown core, just can’t catch a break.
Experts say large numbers of browning trees appear dead or dying, because of a one-two combination of foliage-munching grubs and an exceptionally dry weather spell, with the last appreciable rain falling in Vancouver on Sept. 4.
City of Vancouver arborist Joe McLeod said trees already stressed by infestations of western hemlock looper moth larva have been further pushed toward breaking point by the prolonged summer-like conditions.