Forests and microbes are symbiotically connected globally. Image courtesy of Sora Hasler
Commentary
BEING A STEWARD OF THE ENVIRONMENT IN 2021: Waking up in Minocqua, Wisconsin, one morning in August, I looked out at a hazy sky and smelled the burning forests north of Duluth. This heavy air had been added to the Canadian smoke filling my lungs for the past month. First in Jackson, Wyoming, then in Yellowstone, now in Wisconsin.
Millions of acres of trees whose function had been to create life-essential oxygen would no longer be able to purify the planet. The lungs of the planet were being attacked by drought-driven firestorms, lack of water and clearcutting for profit.
Being surrounded by trees of all kinds and sizes, mosses, ferns,, lichens, mushrooms, brought to mind our 8 year work of educating people about the Black River Forest biome along Lake Michigan..
I had been reading Suzanne Simard’s Finding the Mother Tree, a memoir of her astounding research into the world wide web of trees. (see sources, below), I knew at the beginning of my multi-destination trip that I was walking among living breathing entities, but I didn’t know the forest was anchored by Mother Trees, communicating and cooperating with their kin and other tree species through a microrrhizal fungal network sensing what each other needed, sending nutrients back and forth cooperatively to stay healthy.
Simard speaks about the traditional thinking guiding forestry management, that trees compete with one another for nutrients. Her exhaustive research has shown definitively that mother trees connect with their offspring and other tree species through a worldwide web of microrrhizal fungi. This network exchanges carbon which sends nutrients when needed, alerts for danger and stress. The seminal discovery—these are not one way signals from the Mother Tree, but are sent back in cooperation with one another.
Science is discovering the wonders of trees and literature is weaving these wonders into stories of our interconnection and dependence on them.
“Tree's are life. Not just my life", she would add, since her fields were forests and ecology, "but life period. They literally make oxygen. We need to keep at least seven trees for every human the planet, or else people are going to start suffocating. Think of that.”
― Therese Anne Fowler, A Good Neighborhood
From Richard Powers The Overstory: “We found that trees could communicate, over the air and through their roots. Common sense hooted us down. We found that trees take care of each other. Collective science dismissed the idea. Outsiders discovered how seeds remember the seasons of their childhood and set buds accordingly. Outsiders discovered that trees sense the presence of other nearby life. That a tree learns to save water. That trees feed their young and synchronize their masts and bank resources and warn kin and send out signals to wasps to come and save them from attacks. “Here’s a little outsider information, and you can wait for it to be confirmed. A forest knows things. They wire themselves up underground. There are brains down there, ones our own brains aren’t shaped to see. Root plasticity, solving problems and making decisions. Fungal synapses. What else do you want to call it? Link enough trees together, and a forest grows aware.”
Wow! This brought to mind the many times our FBRF neighbors had queried out of common sense and intuition (and many were avid gardeners), “Taking out Kohler’s 180+ acres connected to the Black River Forested area of the state park, would have to affect the health of the remaining park trees, wouldn't it?" There was no invisible line separating the heavily wooded Kohler property and the park forest. They are part of one and the same biome. Kohler will also remove some trees in the park if it is ultimately allowed to proceed with the land swap.
There is much to learn here for our DNR forestry department when deciding what land it will clear across the state and how this cutting will impact the remaining trees which over time will decline and die. A couple of Mother Trees here may not decimate a forest, but thousands? What a terrible impact on this gem of a state park and those who travel here to enjoy the 150 species of birds, the yearly migratory shows and over 50 species of trees.
In this time of massive planetary degradation, with the UN declaring this the decade of ecosystem restoration, and its IPCC report on the imminently dire impacts of climate change, it is time to prioritize our trees and forests. There could not be an environmentalist who doesn’t know that trees are the lungs of our planet. They filter pollution from air and water creating oxygen.
One effort in the human community is taking place in Pakistan which has recently announced the goal of planting 10 billion trees:
"Direct planting…. accounts for about 40 percent of the program’s new trees. Hundreds of thousands of people across Pakistan are working to nurture and plant 21 species, from the chir pine to the deodar — the national tree.“Everyone is waking up and starting to plant,” lawyer and environmentalist Hazrat Maaz told The Washington Post.” Read the article here
Stewards of the earth are answering the call to plant not cut, restore not plow under, conserve not consume, taking drastic steps to reduce carbon emissions.
The Nature Conservancy Magazine, December, 2020, features Louis Bacon, a conserver of trees. He speaks of those who inspired him: “Ted Turner’s commitment to environmental conservation has also had a significant impact on my conservation philanthropy,” he said. “A trip to Ted’s ranch La Primavera in Patagonia was particularly memorable—to see and experience his efforts in action. Both Ted’s example and my father’s influence have guided and focused my efforts to preserve and protect wildlife habitats and improve water systems for future generations—because once they are lost, they’re gone forever.” Read the Nature Conservancy profile here
What is the value of a forest? While public relations efforts might try to convince us that because golf is the preeminent driver of our state's economy, anything destroyed in its path is worth it, This does not stand up to the data on what brings tourists to Wisconsin.
In his recent op-ed, (here) Steven Davis, author of In Defense of Public Lands, uses state data to value the economic benefit of Kohler Andrae State Park at 19.9 million dollars annually.
Yes! magazine writes in its Fall, 2021 issue, “Given the current climate emergency and the broader ecological breakdown that looms, there are few issues more pressing than that expressed by the single word: ENOUGH." This can mean "no more will be tolerated," but it is also explored from the question of how much do some people really need, when the earth's land, air and water are in dire straits.
There is a message for us all here. Be environmentally bold now. Reduce your emissions now. Preserve the trees now. Restore ecosystems now. Join the valiant efforts around the globe to act swiftly and boldly. Restore, regenerate, conserve HERE, NOW. I join the planet in saying "enough."
Mary Faydash
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