Suzanne Simard, author of Finding the Mother Tree, also hoped that Canadians in the forest system would change their forestry practices. Sadly, the evidence is not compelling that this has happened. In fact, the evidence points in the other direction. She had hoped that her research would change their practices.
In her 2014 Ted Talk Simard showed an aerial photograph of forests within 100 km. of the forest she studied and sadly it showed many large pockets of clear-cut forests. It is far from pristine. In fact, according to the 2014 report of the World Resources Institute Canada in the past decade has had the highest forest disturbance rate of any country worldwide. This might have surprised many who might have thought that this dubious distinction might have gone to Brazil or Indonesia or Russia. In Canada the rate of forest disturbance is 3.6 percent per year. According to Simard that is 4 times the sustainable rate.
Added to that, massive disturbance at this scale is known to affect many other aspects of forest and neighboring ecosystems. Such disturbances can seriously and adversely affect hydrological cycles, degrade wildlife habitat, and emit greenhouse gases back into the atmosphere. All of this in turn creates a vicious circle of forestry abuse. This leads directly to more disturbance and more tree diebacks.
As if that is not bad enough, according to Simard modern North American foresters, when they replant forests they do a very poor job, because often they only plant a couple of species and also weed out what they perceive to be less valuable species such as aspens and birches. According to Simard,
These simplified forests lack complexity, and they’re really vulnerable to infections and bugs. And as climate changes, this is creating a perfect storm for extreme events, like the massive mountain pine beetle outbreak that just swept across North America, or that megafire in the last couple months in Alberta.
Nature loves diversity; it abhors species poor systems, even if foresters like them. They like them because they are easier to harvest and easier to replant. We always have to remember that nature bats last. We should be mimicking nature. That is called biomimicry. We should not be weakening our forests. We should be working hard to strengthening them so that they can deal with future challenges such rapidly approaching climate change. Complex systems like forests have an amazing power to self-heal. But again, they are not omnipotent and never will be even with our help.
Simard’s experiments showed that instead of clear-cutting, patch-cutting and retention of hub trees and regeneration to a diversity of species and genes and genotypes could create strong mycorrhizal networks that would help forests recover quickly. There is hope if we learn to act smarter.
Simard proposed what she called four simple solutions. First, we all need to get out in the forest and connect with them and really look at them. We cannot assume they are exactly like other forests where traditional methods might have worked. Each forest is different. We have to get actively involved in our own forests. We have to avoid the traditional one-size-fits-all approach. Good forestry stewardship absolutely requires deep knowledge of local conditions.
Secondly, we must save our old-growth forests. These “old growth forests are the repositories of genes and mother trees and mycorrhizal networks”. That means we can’t strip them naked. We have to cut less. Loggers won’t like this but it is absolutely essential. We can cut, but we must cut less.
Thirdly, when we do cut, “we need to save the legacies, the mother trees and networks, and the wood, the genes, so they can pass their wisdom onto the next generation of trees so they can withstand the future stresses coming down the road. We need to be conservationists.” We have to think and act like a forest. We have to mimic nature better—much better—than we have done in the past.
Finally, “we must regenerate our forests with a diversity of species and genotypes and structures by planting and allowing natural regeneration. We have to give Mother Nature the tools she needs to use her intelligence to self-heal. And we need to remember that forests aren’t just a bunch of trees competing with each other, they’re super-cooperators.”
Simard said she hoped she had changed the way we think about forests. I know she changed my way of thinking about forests. I wish I was more important.
I know a lot people including a lot of scientists, perhaps even a substantial majority will be sceptical of this new science. That is as it should be. Science should always question new ideas. But they should also question old ideas! Old ideas should not get a pass. Let the evidence speak.
I also wonder if indigenous people would consider this such a radical idea. They often speak of trees, plants, animals, and even rocks, as their kin.