Pacific Spirit Park, UBC |
Last week I
went with Margaret on a nature walk led by UBC Professor and botanist Terry
McIntosh in the Pacific Spirit Forest Park at UBC. McIntosh led us through a
previously logged forest of Douglas fir, cedar, red alder, vine maple and
hemlock. His guided walk was informative, enlightening and entertaining with
copious stories that generated laughter and discussion.
Among many
interesting discoveries, McIntosh pointed out the paint-like splotches of
lichen on the red alder trees, assuring one hiker that these symbiotic communities
of fungus, blue-green algae and in some cases yeast were not a harmful disease
of the tree, but a commensal partner. The presence of lichens, in fact, just
shows that sufficient light is there for them to photosynthesize and grow.
Lichens are also a sign of clean, healthy air—given that they do not tolerate
pollution in the air.
A moss
expert, McIntosh pointed out the mosses on the ground, growing on soil,
concrete and trees. After debunking the myth that mosses only grow on the north
side of trees in the northern hemisphere—they mostly do, but not always—he
mentioned that they were in their dormant stage in the dry summer; the fruiting
bodies sprout when the haploid-dominant moss comes to life during the moist
winter season to produce diploid spores.
When we
reached a partial clearing, McIntosh pointed out 6-foot high horsetails (Equisetum sp.) flourishing amid Spirea and other native plants.
Horsetails are really “living fossils”, being the only living
genus in a family of vascular plants that reproduce by
spores rather than seeds.
Citing a
bogus yet popular information source on the Internet, McIntosh pointed out the
danger of using the Internet for taxonomic and ecological answers. He stressed
the importance of doing accurate research by verifying the source—a reliable
scholarly one. I totally concur with him on this. While the Internet is rich with good information, it can also be misleading and wrong. Users need to be discerning and verify information through cross-checking to ensure a reliable source. See my post on research.
However, I
had to disagree on one point he made in the first five minutes of the walk. McIntosh
began by describing how much of what goes on in a forest ecosystem is
underground, involving bacteria and fungal mycelium that spread and colonize
roots of plants. After supposedly blurting out the word “communicate” he
berated himself and quickly ‘corrected’ by assuring us that “plants don’t
communicate; they aren’t human.” But he allowed that they share nutrients and
minerals.
This is
still communication.
Humans
don’t have the monopoly on communicating; communication occurs in many forms
and ways—including vocalization, smell, frequency, gravity, and intention.
Cells communicate. Atoms communicate. Everything communicates by acting and
reacting, by sharing and receiving. All these interactions are a form of
communication.
Moss growing on Red Alder forms community |
To return
to the subject of plants and trees particularly, UBC’s own forest ecologist Suzanne Simard has proven through hundreds of
experiments over 30 years that trees share information via an underground cooperative
communications network. “They [converse] not only in the language of carbon,”
says Simard in a TED Talk, “but also nitrogen and phosphorus
and water and defence signals and allele chemicals and hormones—information.”
According to Simard, scientists had already speculated that this belowground
mutualistic symbiosis—called a mycorrhiza—was involved. Mycorrhiza literally
means “fungus root.” Fungal cells interact with the root cells and trade carbon
for nutrients. The fungus gets those nutrients by growing through the soil and
coating every soil particle. The mycelium connects different individuals in the
forest—like birch with fir and works like the Internet with nodes and links.
Simard and others demonstrated that hub or mother trees act as nodes to nurture
hundreds of their young saplings and send their excess carbon through the
mycorrhizal network to the understory seedlings.
“Forests
aren’t simply collections of trees” says Simard. “They are complex systems with
hubs and networks that overlap and connect trees to allow them to communicate,
and provide avenues for feedback and adaptation. This makes the forest
resilient through many hub trees and overlapping networks.”
But the
forest is also vulnerable.
In her TED
talk, Simard shows an aerial view of a region dominated by clearcuts, just on
the border of Banff National Park—where several wildfires are currently
burning.
Simard shares that, “in 2014, the World Resources Institute reported that Canada in the past decade has had the highest forest disturbance rate of any country worldwide.” Not Brazil! “It’s 3.6 percent per year—four times the rate that is sustainable,” says Simard.
She warns that massive disturbance at this scale can affect hydrological cycles, degrade wildlife habitat, and emit greenhouse gases into the atmosphere—creating more disturbance and more tree diebacks. She adds that the planting of one or two commercial species at the expense of the aspens and birches decreases needed complexity in the forest; it makes them vulnerable to infections and bugs. And wildfires. As climate changes, “this is creating a perfect storm,” says Simard, citing the massive mountain pine beetle outbreak that swept across North America and the wildfires currently devastating Alberta and British Columbia as good examples of the consequence of human disturbance.
Simard shares that, “in 2014, the World Resources Institute reported that Canada in the past decade has had the highest forest disturbance rate of any country worldwide.” Not Brazil! “It’s 3.6 percent per year—four times the rate that is sustainable,” says Simard.
She warns that massive disturbance at this scale can affect hydrological cycles, degrade wildlife habitat, and emit greenhouse gases into the atmosphere—creating more disturbance and more tree diebacks. She adds that the planting of one or two commercial species at the expense of the aspens and birches decreases needed complexity in the forest; it makes them vulnerable to infections and bugs. And wildfires. As climate changes, “this is creating a perfect storm,” says Simard, citing the massive mountain pine beetle outbreak that swept across North America and the wildfires currently devastating Alberta and British Columbia as good examples of the consequence of human disturbance.
The key to
increasing the resilience to climate-induced wildfires, drought, disease and
insect infestations is in recognizing that trees and other plants do and need to communicate in a diverse
network of information exchange. Our forests have been weakened through poor
forest management based on commercial clearcutting and mono-cultured forests.
Complexity enhances an ecosystem’s ability to self-heal. Retention of hub trees
and patch cutting (as opposed to clearcutting and monoculture) will help to
regenerate a diverse ecosystem, less susceptible to disease, insect
infestations, drought and wildfires (as opposed to regular fires, which can be
beneficial by opening seeds and creating clearings for more light). Wildfires
that burn hot (over 900°C) destroy most of the organic
material of the soil, and with it the helpful fungus and bacteria that connects
the trees. Wildfires may also impact how water circulates in a watershed; the
burned organic matter affects the natural layering of the soils, making it
water repellent. This increases runoff and erosion.
Climate Change and Wildfires
Anatomy of a Wildfire
“Extreme
heat lofts smoke, ash, and fire into the atmosphere, forging a 45,000-foot-tall
convective column that generates two counterrotating vortexes—like a giant egg
beater,” writes Kyle Dickman in Popular Science of the 2011 New Mexico wildfire. “It went from
normal to nuclear, kicking up a 45,000-foot column of tornadic winds and
burning debris.” Here’s how Dickman describes it:
Burning vegetation releases moisture, which the fire’s heat drives up the plume. It condenses into a pyrocumulus cloud, which in turn can create extreme downdrafting winds that can further stoke the ground fire. As vegetation combusts, it releases fuel-rich hydrocarbons. Driven by updrafts, they rise and can ignite into towers of swirling flame. The massive vertical winds inside the column can rip a pine cone off a branch, set it on fire, shoot it a few hundred feet into the air, then spit it as far as 2 miles away, where it can start a new fire. At night, cool dense air pools in the Valles Grande caldera like water filling a 13-mile bathtub. When it sloshes over, it creates 26-foot-per-second winds that fly down-canyon and strike the wildfire’s southern flank. As they squeeze through the canyons radiating from the caldera, the winds gain speed, then rise above the ground and come crashing back like churning ocean waves. As the wind ignites the blaze, it drives the fire forward in 35-foot flames that look like rolling barrels of fire.
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