SB 608 .C45 U6 Copy 1 SGRESS ) y chestnut trees not affected by the chestnut-tree blight, for the purpose of establishing a quarantine to prevent and control the spread of the disease, the owner of such trees shall be reimbursed for the loss of all the good and unaffected trees so destroyed; the amount to be paid therefor to be not greater than the stumpage prices of such trees, prevailing at the time in the locality where such trees grew; such value to be deter- mined by the commission, by such method or procedure as it may adopt, and payment therefor to be made from the fund hereinafter specifically appropriated for the use of the said commission in performing the duties required by this act. Should any owner of trees be dissatisfied with the amount awarded to pay for the destruction of such good and unaffected trees, said owner shall have all the remedies now existing, or which may hereafter be provided by law, for the protection of his interests. Sec 5. Any person who shall willfully violate any of the provisions of this act, or any of the regulations of the commission intended to assist m carrying this act into effect, or shall willfully resist or interfere with any agent or employee of the said com- mission in the performance of his duties in accordance with the regulations and orders of the commission, under the provisions hereof, shall be deemed guilty of misdemeanor, and shall upon conviction thereof be punished by a fine not exceeding $100, or by imprisonment not exceeding one month, either or both, at the discretion of the court. The word "person," as used in this act, shall include not only individuals or natural persons, but as well artificial persons, existing only in contemplation of law, and shall be construed to mean partnerships, limited partnerships, joint-stock companies, and corporations, and the officers, agents, and employees of the same. CHESTNUT TREE BLIGHT. 29 Sec. 0. The members of the commission shall serve without pay, but shall be reim- bursed for all actual expense incurred by them in exercising the powers conferred upon them and performing the duties required by this act. The employees of the commission shall receive such compensation for their services as the <■ dssioil shall determine will fairly compensate them for the work to he dune. The commission shall he furnished with suitable rooms in the Capitol building at Earrisburg, or else- where, by the Superintendent of Public Grounds and Buildings. The sum of $25,000 is hereby specifically appropriated, to be immediately available upon the; approval of this act, for the payment of such expense as may be incurred by the commission, for such scientific research and for office expenses, as in their judgment may lie necessary to comply with the provisions hereof, said appropriation to he available until the 1st, day of June, A. D. 1913; and the further sum of $250,000, or so much thereof as shall be necessary, is hereby specifically appropriated, to be available only upon the approval of the governor, for the performance of all other duties herein required to be done; as, for quarantine, removal of diseased trees or other trees, conducting out- side investigations and operations, and every other means of eradication and control, as to it may seem necessary in complying with the provisions hereof. Sec. 7. All acts or parts of acts inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed. The commission authorized by the bill has been appointed by the governor of Pennsylvania and consists of the following persons: Mr. Winthrop Sargent, chairman; Mr. Harold Peirce, secretary; Messrs. Samuel T. Bodine, George F. Craig, and Theodore N. Ely. Persons desiring information regarding the work on tins disease in Pennsylvania should address the executive officer of the commission, Mr. Samuel B. Detweiler, 1112 Morris Building, Philadelphia, Pa. INSPECTION OF DISEASED NURSERY STOCK. As has been indicated, diseased chestnut nursery stock has in the past been a most important factor in the spread of the bark disease. On account of a well-grounded fear of this disease much less nursery stock is being moved now than formerly, but there is still enough to constitute a serious source of danger. It is therefore obvious that every State in which the chestnut grows, either naturally or under cultivation, should as speedily as possible pass a law putting the chestnut bark disease on the same footing as other pernicious diseases and insect pests, such as peach yellows and the San Jose scale, against which quarantine measures are taken. Many inspectors already have legal power to quarantine against the bark disease on chestnut nurs- ery stock, and they should now take special care that no shipment, however small, escapes their rigid inspection. The most serious practical difficulty in inspecting nursery stock for tins as for other fungous diseases lies in the fact that practically all State inspectors are necessarily entomologists, and are not trained in recognizing the more obscure symptoms of fungous diseases. Nursery trees affected by the bark disease rarely show it prominently at the time when shipped; the threads of summer spores or the yellow or orange pustules are rarely present, and usually all the inspector can find is a small, slightly depressed, dark-colored area of dead bark, usually near the ground, wnich is easily overlooked or mistaken for some insignificant injury. Upon cutting into such a spot, the inner bark shows a most characteristic disorganized "punky appearance, quite different from that of any other bark injury; but it is impos- sible to adequately describe this appearance without recourse to colored illustrations. Occasionally a yellowish-brown band, either girdling or partly girdling the young tree, may be seen; this is very characteristic, but is so prominent a symptom that it may be noticed at the nursery, and presumably trees so affected will not be shipped. 30 CHESTNUT TREE BLIGHT. If infected trees are set out they develop the disease with its char- acteristic symptoms the following spring. But on account of their small size such trees are girdled and die before the end of the sum- mer, often in two or three weeks. Meanwhile they are spreading the disease to neighboring orchard and forest trees. Orchardists and nurserymen purchasing chestnut trees are therefore warned to watch them closely during the first season, no matter how rigidly they may have been inspected. INDIVIDUAL TREATMENT OF DISEASED TREES. Where valuable ornamental, shade, or orchard chestnut trees be- come infected in one or more spots, the life and usefulness of such trees can be prolonged for several or for many years, depending largely upon the thoroughness with which the recommendations herein given for cutting out the diseased areas (lesions) are carried out. These recommendations are based upon the results of extensive experiments with hundreds of lesions during the past four years. These experiments were performed for the most part by the junior writer. The essentials for the work are a gouge, a mallet, a pruning knife, a pot of coal tar, and a paint brush. In the case of a tall tree a ladder or rope, or both, may be necessary, but under no circum- stances should tree climbers be used, as they cause wounds which are very favorable places for infection. Sometimes an ax, a saw, and a long-handled tree pruner are convenient auxiliary instruments, though practically all the cutting recommended can be done with a gouge with a cutting edge of 1 or 1J inches. All cutting instruments should be kept very sharp, so that a clean and smooth cut may be made at all times. By cutting with the gouge into a diseased area a characteristically discolored and mottled middle and inner bark is revealed. All of this diseased bark should be carefully cut out for at least an inch beyond the discolored area if the size of the branch will allow it. Tliis bark should be collected in a bag or basket and burned. If the cutting is likely to result in the removal of the bark for much more than half the circumference of the branch or trunk, it will probably be better to cut off the entire limb or to cut down the tree, as the case may be, unless there is some special reason for attempting to save the limb or tree. The fungus usually, though not always, de- velops most vigorously in the inner bark next to the wood. When this is the case, not only all the diseased bark and an inch of healthy bark around it must be removed, but at least two or three annual layers of wood beneath the diseased bark must also be gouged out. Special care should be taken to avoid loosening the healthy bark at the edges of the cut-out areas. Except in the early spring this is not difficult after a little experience in manipulating the gouge and mallet, provided the gouge is kept sharp. Small branches which have become infected should be cut off, the cut being made wel 1 back of the disease — at least 2 or 3 inches, if possible. All cut-out areas and all the cut ends of stubs should be carefully and completely painted with coal tar. A good grade of paint has CHESTNUT TREE BLIGHT. 31 been recommended by some authorities as superior to tar, but it is more expensive. If the tar is very thick, the addition of a little creo- sote will improve it for antiseptic purposes as well as for ease in applying. If the first coat is thin, a second one of fairly thick tar should be applied within a few weeks or months. Other coats should be applied later whenever it becomes necessary. The entire tree should be carefully examined for diseased spots and every one thoroughly cut out and treated in the way already de- scribed. In case of suspicious-looking spots a portion of the outer baric can be cut out with the sharp gouge as a test. If this cut shows the characteristically discolored bark the spot can be considered as diseased and cut out accordingly; if the cut shows healthy bark, it need merely be treated with tar or paint, as other cuts are treated. In examining a tree for diseased spots it is always best to begin at the base of the trunk and work up, for if the trunk is girdled at the base it is useless to work anywhere on the tree. When the spores of the fungus are present, especially in the form of threads, or- "horns," they are readily washed down the branches and trunk by every rain, and are thus carried down to or toward the base of the tree. As a result the base of a tree, the crotches, and other places which afford easy lodgment for the spores are particu- larly subject to infection. Although spraying with airy of the standard fungicides appears to have no effect whatever in stopping the progress of the disease after it has once started in the inner or middle bark, there is little doubt that it is of use in preventing infection from spores washed down by rain from the upper part of a tree or from spores winch have been transported from other trees. For this reason the spray- ing, after each rain, of the parts of a tree below a spore-bearing lesion is recommended, but only on an experimental basis. If no spore-bearing lesions occur on the tree, there is less apparent reason for spraying. The scattering of slaked lime about the base of a tree and the whitewashing of the trunk and larger limbs have shown apparently beneficial results in preventing infections and perhaps also depredations of borers. A tree which is being treated for individual infections must be carefully watched and the diseased spots promptly cut out as they appear. For this purpose each tree should be examined very care- fully two or three times at least during the growing season. The Department of Agriculture asks the cooperation of all persons who have experimented with the disease in any way, and in return is ready to give specific advice, based upon extensive experience with the disease, as to the best methods of attempting its control or as to what are likely to be the most profitable systematic observations or experiments. ADVICE TO CHESTNUT ORCHARDISTS. In view of the uncertain future of the chestnut tree, the Depart- ment of xigriculture advisos against planting chestnuts anywhere east of Ohio, at least until it is settled what efforts will be made by the individual States to control the bark disease. The only exception is that Japanese chestnuts may be grown if raised from imported seeds and not grafted on American stocks. If the seed is raised in America, 32 CHESTNUT TREE BLIGHT. the trees are more than likely to be hybrids with the American chest- nut and to vary greatly in resistance to the bark disease. If grafted on American stocks, the stocks readily succumb to the disease, and so the whole tree is killed, no matter how resistant the scion. may be. However, the nut of the true Japanese chestnut is of poor quality at best, and it is an open question whether it can ever be made a com- mercial success. West of the natural range of the American chestnut, however, the situation is quite different. Obviously the western chestnut orchard- ist has before him a great opportunity. No matter how successful efforts to limit the bark disease in the East may be, the nut crop will be reduced for some years, and the business of growing fine orchard chestnuts in the East will be depressed for the same length of time. There is no apparent reason why, with rigid inspection, both of any purchased stock and of the orchards themselves, all chestnut orchards and nurseries from Ohio to the Pacific coast can not be kept perma- nently free from the bark disease ; therefore all persons interested in growing the chestnut in the West as an orchard tree are earnestly advised not to secure any chestnut nursery stock from eastern nur- series; to be sure that stock from any source is rigidly inspected; to watch with the utmost care their own nurseries and orchards; 'and to destroy immediately by fire any trees that may be found diseased. There is presumptive evidence that the bark disease was introduced into America on the Japanese chestnut, but until this point is defi- nitely settled orchardists west of Ohio are advised not to import nur- sery stock of this variety. Seed can probably be imported with a reasonable degree of safety, however. ADVICE TO OWNERS OF CHESTNUT WOODLAND. Owners of chestnut woodland anywhere within the area of com- plete infection are earnestly advised to convert their trees into lumber as quickly as possible. The trees that are not already killed will soon die in any case and the timber will quickly deteriorate in quality. Such trees are a continual source of further infection, and, moreover, large areas of dead chestnut trees, by harboring bark and wood inhabiting insects, are likely to start some insect epidemic. ^ Indeed, with the quantity of dead chestnut timber now standing it will be remarkable if some serious infestation of insects extending to sound trees does not follow. Owners of chestnut woodland outside the area of general infection are counseled to watch for the first appearance of the disease, and when it appears to cut down immediately all affected trees, bark them, and burn the bark and brush, over the stump if practicable. Such procedure will distinctly retard the spread of the disease^ in that particular woodland, even if no concerted efforts at elimination are made by neighboring owners. It is to be expected, however, that in all cases of this land the owner will have the cooperation of the State authorities in a general quarantine movement. It is almost needless to add that until we know what action is to be taken in all the chestnut-growing States and what the results are likely to be, chestnut woodland is a poor investment. Furthermore, in forest management, as in improvement cuttings, etc., there should be discrimination against the chestnut. CHESTNUT TREE BLIGHT. 33 ADVICE TO OWNERS OF ORNAMENTAL CHESTNUT TREES. Until the future of the chestnut tree is better known, or at least until we know what legalized action is going to be taken in the States concerned, the owners of chestnut-timbered land available for building should pursue a very conservative policy. Houses should not be located with sole reference to chestnut groves or to isolated ornamental chestnut trees. Houses so located should he discrimi- nated against in purchasing homes in so far as the death of the chestnut trees would injure the appearance of the place. When ornamental trees become diseased they had better be cut down at once and, if practicable, large trees of other species moved in to take their places. In expert hands the moving of large trees is a perfectly practicable and successful procedure and, although more expensive, is much more satisfactory than waiting for nursery trees to grow. 1 All owners of diseased ornamental chestnut trees are specifically warned against "fake" tree doctors. Large sums of money have been paid out in many cases for treatment that has been worse than useless. Reliable tree specialists will have nothing to do with trees affected with the chestnut bark disease, or, if they do anything, do it with the distinct understanding in advance that it is entirely at the owner's risk. Of course, if an owner desires to employ tree surgeons to experiment, that is another matter. ADVANCING POPULAR KNOWLEDGE OF THE DISEASE. In the localities where infection is general or complete (fig. 2) everyone knows what the chestnut bark disease is and what its symp- toms are and everyone appreciates its seriousness; but in these local- ities it is too late even to attempt its control. On the other hand, in Delaware, Virginia, West Virginia, western and southern Mary- land, western Pennsylvania, central and northern New York, Massa- chusetts, and Rhode Island very few people know the symptoms of the disease. On this account no one notices it until it is thoroughly established, and by the time public sentiment is sufficiently aroused to authorize the necessary legislation and bring about united action for public protection it is too late for such action to be of service. Obviously, then, every effort should be made by all State and other officials having such matters in charge to acquaint every citizen with the prominent symptoms of the bark disease and to familiarize him with the fact that unless prompt and united action is taken there is every indication that the chestnut tree in the States above men- tioned will become practically extinct within 10 years. COOPERATION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. In this campaign of education the Department of Agriculture will cooperate in the following ways: Copies of this bulletin or of other publications of this department relating to the bark disease, and also 1 In case such action is not immediately durable or possible, a very good, though temporary, scenic effect can be obtained by lopping off the end-; of the larger branches of the dead and dying chestnut trees', removing the bark, and planting some rapid-growing vine at their foot, which soon covers them. One of the best for this purpose is the Japanese kudzu vine (Pueraria thumbergiana (S. and Z.) (Bcnth.). on account of its extraordinarily rapid growth. Such vine-covered stumps must be carefully watched, how- ever, for in a very few years they decay and are liable to be blown over. 43017°— S. Doc. 653, 62-2 3 34 CHESTNUT TREE BLIGHT. typical specimens of the disease, will be sent to any person applying for them. Two specimens will be sent to each person — one snowing the appearance of the disease on smooth bark, and the other the later development of the fungus on thick bark. In both these specimens the fungus will have been killed by soaking in formalin to insure against any infection from this source. So far as the supply permits, lantern slides and photographs will, upon application, be loaned for special lectures, exhibits, etc., to the officers of States, experiment stations, colleges, and schools where agriculture is taught, as well as to tree wardens and other officials whose work may bear directly upon local campaigns of publicity. Tins department will always examine any suspected specimens of this disease sent to Washington by mail, and will report the findings as promptly as possible. Before sending specimens, however, all persons are urged to read the paragraphs on symptoms on pages 6 to 9 in order to select the specimens intelligently. For example, if the end of a girdled and withered branch is sent, it is not possible to make a dependable diagnosis unless a portion of the girdling area happens to be included. This is the only part where the fungus is surely present, and the fungus iteslf must be seen in order to be absolutely sure of the disease. Portions of the bark that show the small orange or reddish-brown pustules, about the size of the head of a pin, should always be sent , if these can be found. These commonly occur near the lower edge of the girdling area. PUBLIC COOPERATION. With many people familiarized with the appearance of the chest- nut-bark disease and its possibilities of harm, the disease will be noticed and stamped out by private effort in man}' places when it first appears and the public will understand and be ready to cooper- ate in any official measures of control as soon as these become neces- sary in any locality. All possible forces must be enlisted in a campaign of publicity. The cooperation of all newspapers, particularly local papers, can be easily secured in all the States where the chestnut is an important tree. A portion of the program for Arbor Day, 1912, should be devoted to a consideration of tins disease. Teachers of nature study, botany, or agriculture in the public schools can do great service by teaching their pupils how to recognize the disease and by training them to be on the lookout for its first appearance in the home com- munity. Such a body as the "Boy Scouts" can, if properly trained, become in eveiy community a most efficient force for locating the disease. The boys will readily appreciate that such work is real "scouting" against a most insidious and destructive public enemy. And, finally, many private owners of chestnut trees wall be eager to cooperate with the State authorities in the early elimination of advance infections if only they are able to recognize such infections. THE PROTECTION OF THE SOUTHERN STATES. It must be remembered that the bark disease has as yet done only a small fraction of the damage that it is undoubtedly capable of doing. The best chestnut timber of America is south of the Potomac Iliver CHESTNUT TEEE BLIGHT. 35 and there the Dark disease is present in only a few spots. For this reason it is of extraordinary importance that these few spots be eradi- cated and that the disease be soon controlled immediately north of the Potomac. If the bark disease once becomes well established in the chestnut forests of the South, it will be well-nigh impossible to control it, on account of the sparsely settled and mountainous condition of much of that country and for other reasons which do not obtain farther north. SUMMARY. (1) The chestnut-bark disease was first noted near New York City in 1904 and is now present in at least 10 States. It attacks the American chestnut, the European chestnut, the chinquapin, and, rarely, the Japanese chestnut. (2) The total financial loss from this disease is now estimated at $25,000,000. (3) The disease is caused by a fungus, and the entrance of a spore at any point where the bark is broken may cause infection. The disease spreads primarily in the inner bark and produces character- istic lesions which girdle the tree at the point attacked. (4) Conspicuous symptoms are the development of bunches of sprouts below the girdling lesions; the half-formed yellowish leaves in the spring on the previously girdled branches, the reddish-brown leaves on branches girdled in summer, and the yellow, orange, or reddish-brown pustules of the fruiting fungus on the bark. It is practically useless to attempt systematic location of the disease from October to April, inclusive. (5) The spores may be carried considerable distances on chestnut nursery stock, tan bark, and unbarked timber; also by birds, insects, squirrels, etc., which have come in contact with the sticky spore masses. Water quickly dissolves these spore masses and the minute spores are in this way carried along with water, as, for instance, with rain water running down a tree. Borers' tunnels form the most common places of entrance for spores. (6) The only known practical way of controlling the disease in a forest is to locate and destroy the advance infections as soon as possible after they appear and, if the disease is well established near by, to separate the area of complete infection from the comparatively uninfected area by an immune zone. Advance infections should be located by trained observers and destroyed by cutting and burning. As the disease develops almost entirely in the bark, this must be com- pletely destroyed (burned). (7) In order to carry out the above methods it is essential that the several States concerned secure necessary legislation and appro- priations, following the example of Pennsylvania, as no law exists whereby the Federal Government can* undertake such work and cooperation among private owners without State supervision is impracticable. (8) Chestnut nursery stock should be rigidly inspected for the disease and only perfectly healthy plants passed. (9) The life of valuable ornamental trees may be greatly prolonged by promptly cutting out all diseased areas and removing all disease- girdled branches and then covering the cuts with tar. Spraying is 36 CHESTNUT TREE BLIGHT. of no use in stopping the fungus after it has once started growth in the bark. (10) It is recommended that owners of infected woodland cut down and utilize the diseased chestnut timber as soon as possible. (11) For the present the planting of chestnuts anywhere east of Ohio is not advised, but there is no apparent reason why chestnut orchards west of Ohio may not be kept free from the disease. o Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate I. Known Distribution of the Chestnut Bark Disease February 1, 1912. [Horizontal lines show the botanical distribution of the American chestnut tree. Dots repre- sent advance infections. Thicker lines, arranged concentrically about New York City, show various degrees of general infection and death.] Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate II. Fig. 1.— Typical Group of Large Chestnut Trees Dying with the Bark Disease. Near Brookville, N. Y. [Note appearance of foliage.] Fig. 2.— Dead Chestnut Trees Along a Boulevard, near Richmond Hill, N. Y. [Note healthy condition of trees of other species. J Senate Document No. 653, 62 Plate III. Fig. 1.— The most Southern Point of Infection— A Group of Diseased Chestnut Trees at Fontella, Bedford County, Va. L] -^/" sV \m I ^xjb/ \ \ —3 v \ V *r* * Imm 1 V wm ■ *1 nB '"■&• • Ifi^ ■ V J^;., >4 : -- * - : -'4j|P ■ yary ^ Fig. 2.— Forest Tree Nearly Dead. Parkton, Md. [Note characteristic sprouts and dwarfed leaves of the only surviving branches.] Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate IV. ...- • '.'■■.»■■ . a ■"»; '.'■-'3B ■•EmHSJ*' i^SMH ^ 1 1 1 1 1 Fig. 1.— Tree with some Large Branches Girdled, Westbury, N. Y. [Note appearance of foliage.] Fig. 2.— Tree with Small Branches Girdled, Buck, Pa. [Note appearance of foliage.] Senate Document No. 653, fi2-2. Plate V. Complete Destruction of Chestnut Trees in Mixed Stand. [Note health j- condition of trees of other species. Views along the Long Island Railroad.] Senate Document No. £53, 62-2. Plate VI. Fig. 1.— Complete Destruction of Chestnut Trees in Nearly Pure Stand. [Many of the trunks have been dead long enough to shed their bark. Near Brooklyn, N. Y.] Fig. 2.— Complete Destruction of Chestnut Trees in a Nearly Pure Stand. [Xote healthy condition of other species. Forest Park, near Brooklyn, N. Y.] Senate Document No. 653, 62-2 IE Plate VI Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate VI If. Grafted Varieties of Orchard Chestnuts, Nearly Dead. Martic Forge, Pa. [Note the suckers on the trunk and the appearance of the foliage.] Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate IX. Mi- ... .J Wfe^^ ; 'l '-.^"iV'l iiiiw? Fig. 1.— Early Stage of Disease. Infection of a Small Branch in the Top of the Tree. Westbury, N. Y. Fig. 2. -Early Stage of Disease. End of Branch Girdled at Upper Right- Hand of Picture. Lancaster County, Pa. Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate X. co >- Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate XI. ^H^' % ■ % Dead Chestnut Trees, with Bark in Successive Stages of Decay, Showing Pustules of the Fungus in which the Winter Spores are Borne. Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate XII Late Stages of Decay of Bark and Outer Layers of Wood. Senate Document No. 653. 62-2. Plate XIII. Fig. 1.— Dead and Dying Sprout Growth, Port Jefferson N. Y. [Note healthy condition of trees of other species.] Fig. 2.— Typical Group of Dead Chestnut Trees. Near Brooklyn, N. Y. [Note dead suckers on the trunks. From left to right: The first trunk shows the disease less than 1 year old: the second from 2 to 3 years old; the third 4 or more years old; and the fourth about 3 years old.] Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate XIV. Fig. 1.— External Appearance of a Young Lesion of the Chestnut Bark Disease, Showing the Spread of the Disease from an Insect Puncture. Fig. 2.— The Same as Fig. 1, with the Outer Bark Removed to Show the Centrifugal Spread of the Mycelium of the Parasitic Fungus. Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate XV, Small Chestnut Tree in Pot about 3 Months after Artificial Inoculation with Summer Spores from a Pure Culture of the Fungous Parasite. Tree Girdled at Base, Leaves above Withered; Vigorous Suckers Growing Uf from Below Girdled Point. Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate XVI. W\^V$JU r AJB^V^ y^- /'SI mm rfTj^. iit, ^ r^ » * Examples of Tree Surgery, Showing Healing Processes after Cutting Out Lesions, in Treatment of Orchard Trees. Senate Document No. 653, 62-2. Plate XVII. Fig. 1. -Large Chestnut Tree Killed by the Bark Disease. Fig. 2.— An Orchard Tree, Showing Recently Girdled Branches. Fig. 3.— Part of a Diseased Branch of a Chestnut Tree, Showing Typical Pustules and Form of Spore Discharge in Damp Weather. [Magnified 3 diameters.] LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 002 810 885