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This tree on my property is foaming. What is the reason for this and should I be worried?

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JStorage
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Programmer
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    Has it been pretty wet where you are? If so, this might be the answer to your question https://gardening.stackexchange.com/questions/32802/what-is-this-white-foam-under-my-tree/32805#32805 – Bamboo Jun 15 '17 at 12:41
  • @Bamboo we just had a huge storm pass through. Why would it foam though? None of the other trees have this. – Programmer Jun 15 '17 at 13:39
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    Are all the other trees the same variety of tree? If they are ,for some reason, this one's got a lot wetter than the others, if they're not the same, some trees do this, most don't. Provided it doesn't froth when the weather's totally dry, its not a problem – Bamboo Jun 15 '17 at 13:41
  • @Bamboo We have many trees of this type on our property. I think this one is a maple. The top of this tree has some pretty large dead branches (6-10" diameter). Some of them have broken off in the past. – Programmer Jun 15 '17 at 13:47
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    Check it once the weather's been dry for while, examine as much of the trunk as you can see, looking for weeping or soft areas, especially if any leakage is nasty smelling, it might indicate bacterial flux or just gummosis, but while the tree's soaking wet, it will be hard to detect properly – Bamboo Jun 15 '17 at 14:49
  • Have you checked out recent questions about the same phenomenon? – stormy Jun 15 '17 at 20:54
  • If it's my issue, (I'm the author of the other question), and the foam happens in the same area under multiple rainstorms, then it's due to internal chemicals of the tree reacting with the rain and then a persistent, consistent drip into the same area causing a strong bubble to form. – JoshDM May 22 '18 at 19:24

2 Answers2

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Foaming is not a good sign. There might be species where normal sap from the plant will foam but if so, they are very unusual. The fluid may be coming from decomposing dead wood inside the tree. Alternatively it can be mostly sap and caused by an active disease agent. Irritated, the plant tissue is doing what it can to eject the pathogen.

Regardless of exactly what is coming out - sap, water collecting in decayed wood, secretions from a fungus - there’s a reason it’s coming out. There has to be a lesion in the inner bark. Water can’t just slide down the inside of a tree’s bark and weep back out lower down unless the cambium under that part of the bark is dead.

Most likely the foam indicates rot at or slightly above the place that is oozing. Depending on lots of specifics like how much you care about the tree and what it potentially could hit if it fell, it’s probably a good time to get a good arborist to take a look.

Just the same, don’t assume the situation is dire. Perhaps it’s a disease that an arborist can help the tree to overcome. Maybe the area of dead tissue is small enough to be cut out or for the tree to heal up on its own. As an example of the latter, I nearly cut down a peach one spring because it had developed oozing vertical wounds in several places on the trunk. A more experienced friend said the tree, too exposed to the wind, had cracks in its wood and breaks in the bark from winter drying (that lesion thing). She said there was a good chance the tree would survive. It has, and a couple years later is doing much better. All I had to do to “cure” the problem was keep my chainsaw away from it!

Short answer/recommendation: Pay a well-qualified arborist to look at your tree. Free consultations from tree removal services aren’t necessarily the best. Check their professional associations and qualifications before going that route. Or maybe the local extension agent will consult for free.

InColorado
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  • That doesn't look like foam coming out from inside the tree, but formed on the tree bark itself. It is more likely rainwater mixed with internal tree chemicals (exposed wood, sap) landing on that bark in such a way as to create a bubble. Continue consistently for hours from a static location above the drop zone, protected from other rain washing it away will create a bubbly area over time. – JoshDM May 22 '18 at 19:28
  • I do agree with your assessment of the photo! – InColorado May 23 '18 at 15:06
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If this is immediately after a storm came through, then this is a duplicate of my own issue, What is this white foam under my tree?

The rainwater reacts with chemicals from the tree/sap/exposed wood, and the angle of the water dripping from above onto the trunk below causes a bubble formation in exactly that area. It will happen exactly there on future rainstorms.

JoshDM
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