Forest Health
Texas A&M Forest Service Forest
Health was established in 1962 to deal with an increasing southern pine beetle
problem in Southeast Texas. Since then, responsibilities have expanded to
include assistance for all major forest health issues throughout the
state.
Forest
health issues may occur throughout the state, principally affecting the
commercial forests of East Texas and the woodlands of Central and West Texas.
In East Texas, TFS foresters deliver the federally funded Southern
Pine Beetle Prevention Cost Share Program which provides financial
incentives to encourage private landowners to thin young, dense pine stands.
Timely thinning promotes tree vigor and rapid growth, making pine stands less
susceptible to attacks by this destructive forest pest. Within the woodlands of
Central Texas, TFS foresters administer a USDA Forest Service-sponsored program
to manage oak
wilt, a disease that kills oaks across much of the U.S.