I have been thinking a lot about forests lately. Forests are endlessly fascinating. If you are tired of forests, you are tired of life. I also says that about orchids.
“A forest is much more than what you see,” says forest ecologist Suzanne Simard. Her 30 years of research in Canadian forests have led to an astounding discovery — trees talk, often and over vast distances. I listened to a Ted Talk that she gave at Banff, Alberta in 2016. It was extremely interesting. After listening to her I thought about forests in entirely new ways. I had a new attitude to nature.
She said that forests are not just a collection of trees, as we tend to think of them. That is certainly how foresters and loggers think of them. They use the expression “stand.” According to Simard, “Yes, trees are the foundation of forests, but a forest is much more than what you see.”
Forests are complex systems. What you see above ground is just a part of that system. As Simard pointed out, “underground there is this other world, a world of infinite biological pathways that connect trees and allow them to communicate and allow the forest to behave as though it’s a single organism. It might remind you of a sort of intelligence.” This is a shocking way to think about forests. It goes entirely against a long history of forestry science. It is a rebellious way to think about forests.
When Simard’s dog fell into her outhouse and she and her grandfather tried to rescue it, she began to realize that there was a lot beneath the surface and that science had not paid sufficient attention to this subterranean world. She saw “that palette of roots and soils was really the foundation of the forest.”
As a result of her epiphany she studied forestry at university. That she worked with those who were literally battling the forests. They were in a war against the forests and the forests were losing. She was alarmed by the extensive clear-cutting, but also the spraying of chemicals as part of this military engagement and the hacking, as she called it, of aspens and birches to make room for more commercially valuable planted pines and firs. This disturbed her greatly. “It seemed that nothing could stop this relentless industrial machine.”
She went back to school and studied some more. There she noticed that scientists in the laboratory had discovered that one pine seedling root could transmit carbon to another pine seedling root. She wondered if that could be observed in a real world forest. She believed that “ Trees in real forests might also share information below ground.” This was extremely controversial. Many scientists did not accept that trees could “communicate.” This was to them an entirely foreign concept. It was anthropomorphizing forests like Jane Goodall had been anthropomorphizing chimpanzees. Scientists have also said that they must resist that temptation. As a result, she had trouble getting funding for her proposed research projects.
Eventually she got some funding, but it meant the research would have to be done on the cheap. She wanted to do her research in the forests. She grew 80 replicates of three tree species: Paper birch, Douglas fir, and western red cedar.
Simard surmised that the birch and the fir would be connected in a below ground web, but not the cedar. It was in its own other world. She got her scientific apparatus, many supplies and tools from Canadian Tire. But she also secured some sophisticated equipment from her university, including a Geiger counter, a scintillation counter, a mass spectrometer, microscopes. After that she actually got some really dangerous stuff: syringes full of radioactive carbon-14 carbon dioxide gas and some high pressure bottles of the stable isotope carbon-13 carbon dioxide gas. She had obtained the legal right to do that for her research, but she had to be careful.
Her research revealed some fascinating stuff. I will talk about that next time.
