Skip to content

Secure Your Spot! The Park Ball-Gala in the Glades 2026

72°F
TOP

home /

about /

News /

The standing dead: ‘Zombie Trees’ line city

Nature & WildlifePress

The standing dead: ‘Zombie Trees’ line city

by

Communications

3 min read

September 6, 2018

Houston Chronicle | By Molly Glentzer
After a year that saw dry heat, flooding and ice, landscape maybe stressed, arborists say

A leaf-peeper driving through Houston might think fall is around the corner, looking at the changing canopies of bald cypresses, maples, elms, certain oaks and sycamores across the landscape.A leaf-peeper driving through Houston might think fall is around the corner, looking at the changing canopies of bald cypresses, maples, elms, certain oaks and sycamores across the landscape.

That would be wishful thinking. Cooler fall temperatures that trigger leaf color don’t typically arrive here until November or December.

Trees that are dropping leaves now are likely stressed and may need attention, experts say.

Matthew Petty, an arborist with Davey Tree Expert Co., said he has seen evidence of tree stress across the city since July. August’s searing heat brought no relief. Some arborists have even coined a name for specimens that look alive but are in fact standing above already-dead root systems: zombie trees.

“People think their trees are dying for no reason, but roots are compromised,” Petty said. “We’ve had odd weather patterns, with Harvey, hard freezes last winter and long, hot dry spells this summer. Trees that were already stressed, that pushed them over the edge.”

City forester Victor Cordova, whose department oversees trees at more than 300 parks and many miles of right-of-way, said he has seen nothing out of the ordinary other than trees that look thirsty. He thinks they’ll be fine, especially after recent rains.

But in the most forested area of the inner city, issues appear more evident.

Suzanne Longley, a professional landscaper who owns a tree farm near Brenham, saw them as she exercised along the Memorial Park loop early one morning last week. She saw scraggly post oaks, the yellowing leaves of sycamores, red needles on bald cypresses and crispy leaves on maples and cedar elms.

That doesn’t mean all those trees are goners. Some species, including sycamores and cypress, drop their leaves to survive dry spells and recover with rain, Longley said.

 

Not what it seems

Post oaks, a treasured native species, are another story. They are finicky and hard to re-establish, said Carolyn White, the Memorial Park Conservancy’s conservation director. She is working to revive Memorial Park’s post oaks by aerating their root systems and injecting biological amendments created from the compost of fallen trees.

The severe drought of 2011 decimated about half the Park’s trees. The conservancy began a reforestation project soon after that, and in 2013 it developed a master plan that includes reviving the Park’s heritage ecosystems. City Council approved the plan in 2015.

But trees can take years to die, compromised in ways that aren’t always obvious. “So we’ll see a perfectly green tree topple right over,” White said.

Weak trees also are more susceptible to damaging insects. White said the Park’s cedar elms and winged elms have turned yellow in late summer for several years now; they are being attacked by “innocuous parasites.” That’s a minor problem, she said.

This summer’s dry spell prompted the conservancy to step up its watering of youngish landscaping trees that have been planted in recent years, White said. “They’re still suffering.”

That’s one of the reasons why “upland forest” pockets of the Park’s new Eastern Glades, which won’t open until 2020, have been planted with seedlings that have to be watered for only about two years. Starting smaller means more resilient trees long-term, White said. Seedlings also cost less than larger specimens raised in plastic pots.

Memorial Park visitors once thought of the 1,500-acre green space only as a dense urban forest. But White and others say they were not seeing a healthy environment. Decades of hands-off land management allowed native and non-native species to overpopulate into thickets, until storms and drought reset the landscape.

A visitor would be hard pressed to see it through all the concrete, but Houston sits at a complex intersection of piney woods, Gulf Coast prairie and post oak savanna. Bayous flow through it all, creating riparian corridors with robust forests—the places where wildlife likes to hang out, White said.

 

Hidden problem

Restoring a semblance of that eco-balance is a building block of the Memorial Park master plan. White wants to create “hands-off turf” in savanna areas as well as re-establish a proper forest floor. With the tree issues, she said, “You’re looking at a jigsaw puzzle on top of a jigsaw puzzle to determine which areas need rehabilitation versus some watering.”

Petty has observed another problem—root rot—around Houston in trees of all sizes. He suspects they were oversaturated by Hurricane Harvey’s prolonged rains or the Memorial Day or Tax Day deluges before that, although the fungal issues have not been limited to areas of the city that flooded badly.

Trees that receive proper and regular care by a certified arborist are healthier going into stress situations. That does not guarantee they will survive intense conditions, Petty said. “But the scariest tree is one that falls over because of unseen issues.”

Previous
Next

News at the Park

February 27, 2026

Food Trucks at Live Oak Court

February 26, 2026

2026 Texas Children’s Houston Open

MORE NEWS

Interactive Park Map

Visit the Memorial Park map to explore all the Park has to offer: trails, recreation facilities, historic sites, and more!

GO TO MAP
Park Calendar

Visit the calendar to see our upcoming events and plan your next visit!

VIEW CALENDAR

It’s your Memorial Park. Learn how your support impacts the Park.

Dawn to Dusk, Daily

SUPPORT

Dawn to Dusk, Daily

Contact
Park Map
Directions
Permits
Reservations
Things To Do
PLACES TO SEE
UPCOMING EVENTS
CONSERVATION & PARK CARE

Park Hours:
5:00 AM - 11:00 PM, Daily

7575 North Picnic Lane
Houston, Texas 77007
713.863.8403

SIGN UP FOR PARK NEWS

Subscribe Now
Instagram Facebook Linkedin

SIGN UP FOR PARK NEWS

Subscribe Now
Instagram Facebook Linkedin
7575 North Picnic Lane
Houston, Texas 77007
713.863.8403

©2026 Memorial Park Conservancy, All Rights Reserved.

©2026 Memorial Park Conservancy,
All Rights Reserved.

Privacy Policy

Terms & Conditions

DESIGN BY FoSD

Secure Your Spot! The Park Ball-Gala in the Glades 2026

72°F

Trail Status

Park Hours

Visit

Things To Do

Places To See

Event Calendar

Reservations

Permits

Maps & Parking

Discover

Park Master Plan

Conservation
& Park Care

100 Years Of
Memorial Park

About

History

Mission

Our Team

Board Of Directors

News

Careers

Contact

Support

Give a Gift

Corporate Support

Become A Member

Volunteering

72°F

Trail Status

Park Hours

72°F

Trail Status

Park Hours

Visit

Park Information

Things To Do

Places To See

Event Calendar

Reservations

Permits

Maps & Parking

Discover

Park Master Plan

Conservation & Park Care

100 Years Of Memorial Park

About

Memorial Park Conservancy

History

Mission

Awards

Our Team

Board Of Directors

Financials

News

Careers

Contact

Support

Get Involved

Give a Gift

Corporate Programs

Become A Member

Volunteering