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The 'ash management plan' aims to slow the spread of the fungus, which threatens 129,000 hectares of the UK
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If we save our trees, we save our souls
Hannah BettsHannah Betts: We British identify with trees, and I hope ash dieback is a spur for all of us to think more deeply about them
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Full facts of disease are being hidden from public, say critics, as nurseries hit by deadly fungus complain about being identified
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Caroline Lucas: Though ministers finally seem to have begun listening to scientists, strengthening biosecurity demands investment
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Country diary: Romaldkirk, Teesdale: The trunks of ancient ashes are wrapped from root to crown in a glossy evergreen coat of ivy, with bare branches protruding like stag antlers
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Country diary: Waresley Wood, Cambridgeshire: The charcoal buds on the tips of the ash tree's twigs seemed now to be the stigmata of wounds yet to come
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Clive Anderson, president of the Woodland Trust, says the oak, plane, ash and pine will adapt to survive
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Letters: Children benefit socially, physically and emotionally from spending time outside and learning for themselves how to play in, explore and respect the natural environment
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Heavy-handed tree planting creates a dull, uniform woodland that does nothing to tackle habitat loss, argues Andy Byfield
Chelsea flower show makes its beds, and peace, with garden gnomes