Unparalleled Habitats: The Unique Shapes of Ancient Trees

Unparalleled Habitats: The Unique Shapes of Ancient Trees




Earth’s ​oldest, knotted and scarred pine trees⁣ are a boon for forest‍ life. Old growth ⁣trees continue to decline around the world (SN: 6/18/18). In Europe, the remaining patches of forest with plentiful⁤ old trees⁢ constitute just 0.7 percent (or just ‌under 3.5‌ million acres) ⁢of the continent’s forested area.⁣ This​ paper and others like it “are really good, because they show ‍how important old⁤ growth is,” says Joseph⁢ Birch, an ⁤ecologist at ‍Michigan State University ⁢in⁣ East ⁢Lansing who wasn’t involved with the research. This line​ of work serves as a ‌reminder that we need to have a long-term perspective on old growth trees. “We ​need to be managing and conserving⁤ the ‍forests that we have now, even if they’re younger, so that our descendants⁢ in a few hundred or even thousand years can have more old growth on the landscape,” Birch says.‌ While the pines’ old age, potentially hundreds of years old, was intriguing to ⁣plant physiologist Sergi Munné-Bosch‍ and ‍ecophysiologist Ot Pasques, both ‍at the University of‌ Barcelona, ⁢they have also been curious how aging and ⁢tree decay‍ affect the broader forest ecosystem, with different ​life​ and decay‌ stages providing differing habitat ⁣needs to plant, ‌animal‌ and lichen species. Prior studies tended to look at how individual trees⁤ aged.⁣ So Munné-Bosch and Pasques decided ⁣up the ante. They ⁣studied young,‌ adult and extremely old mountain pines in ‍five different areas of the Spanish Pyrenees mountains.​ The duo calculated the trees’ ages‍ based⁣ on tree trunk girth. (The two traits are ‍correlated, eliminating the need to⁤ bore a sample out of ⁣the‌ trunk to count tree⁣ rings). The team also ‌weighed and measured needles, buds‌ and shoots, analyzed the trees’ tissues ‍for ⁢biochemicals linked to stress, decay and growth and noted age-related physical ⁢traits‍ in⁣ the trees — such as exposed roots, fissured bark ​and lightning ⁢scars.⁢ Data on other ‌species living in or on the trees were also ⁣recorded.

2024-02-23 10:30:00
Post from www.sciencenews.org

Exit mobile version