reading The Hidden Life of Trees – Chapter 12

hidden-life-of-trees-chapter-12-notes

Peter Wohlleben’s The Hidden Life of Trees

Page numbers in parentheses. Italics are my own questions of the text.

Chapter 11 Notes

Chapter 10 Notes             Chapter 9 Notes      Chapter 8 Notes

Chapter 7 Notes               Chapter 6 Notes      Chapter 5 Notes

Chapters 3 & 4 Notes      Chapter 2 Notes      Foreword, Introductions, and Chapter 1 Notes

Chapter 12 Mighty Oak or Mighty Wimp?

beeches

• central europe is their home (69)

• harass other species

• how?

• jay buries beechnut by an oak

• seed sprouts

• sapling grows upwards

• oak provides shade

• beech roots

• penetrate every inch of space oak roots not using

• soak up oak’s water

• after 150 years

• grows into crown of oak

• extends crown

• catches 97% of light

• oak starves

• desperately tries to grow leaves at base of trunk

• oak

• tough with no competition (70)

• oaks can last 500 years outside the forest

• beeches need the forest – can only last 200 years

• wounds or cracks in trunk:

• protected with tannins (71)

• discourage fungi growth

• branches broken

• can grow replacement crown

• thick bark

• beeches are thin-skinned (72)

reading The Hidden Life of Trees Chapter 11

hidden-life-of-trees-chapter-11-notes

Peter Wohlleben’s The Hidden Life of Trees

Page numbers in parentheses. Italics are my own questions of the text.

Chapter 10 Notes             Chapter 9 Notes      Chapter 8 Notes

Chapter 7 Notes               Chapter 6 Notes      Chapter 5 Notes

Chapters 3 & 4 Notes      Chapter 2 Notes      Foreword, Introductions, and Chapter 1 Notes

Chapter 11 Trees Aging Gracefully

bark = skin

• protects trees inner organs (61)

• without bark

• tree dries out

• fungi start breaking everything down

• insects also invade with lower moisture levels

tree adds .5 to 1 inch in girth

• trees renew skin and shed skin cells

young trees = smooth outer bark (62)

• as trees age wrinkles appear

• starting from bottom

• deepen over time

beeches

• high renewal rate

• skin thin

• matches girth

• doesn’t crack

pines

• shed slowly

• thick oak bark

• exterior layers decades old (63)

• outer layers originated when tree was young

beeches

• once they start to wrinkle

• mosses colonize nooks and crannies

• estimate tree age by height of green moss

• higher the moss, older the tree

canadian west coast (64)

• ancient growth

• sitka spruce

• 500 years old

• moss in branches and forks

• algae

• capture nitrogen

• rain washes nitrogen down trunk

• nitrogen is a fertilizer

• fertilizes young trees

old age

• after 100 – 300 years (65)

• crown growth gets shorter

• every tree gradually stops getting taller

• energy levels drop

• loses twigs top-down

• fungi advance inward (66)

• consume cellulose and lignin

• trees grows outward to counter

• trunk snaps

reading The Hidden Life of Trees – Chapter 5

hidden-life-of-trees-chapter-5-notes

Peter Wohlleben’s The Hidden Life of Trees.

Chapter 3 & 4 Notes

Chapter 2 Notes

Foreword, Introductions, and Chapter 1 Notes

Chapter 5 The Tree Lottery

beeches and oaks blossom every 3 – 5 years

• vacate leaves to make room for blossoms (26)

• trees left vulnerable

• nothing left to defend against sickness or insects

• have to endure insect attack without responding (27)

• sick trees don’t produce fewer blossoms

• protect their genetic legacy

• blossom production has more to do with the previous year than the upcoming year (27)

seeds

• beeches and oaks

• seeds fall directly under mother trees

• sprout as quickly as possible (28)

• bird cherries

• pioneer species

• seeds can lie dormant for up to 5 years

only one tree will reach adulthood! (29)

• beeches = 30k beechnuts

• sexually mature @ 80 – 150 years

• live about 400 years

• 60 fruitings over that span

= 1.8 million beechnuts

• poplars

• 54 million seeds every year

• more than a billion seeds in a lifetime (30)