[Home]
[Full version]
Preserving the Hemlock
Mar 04 ,Space & Earth science
As part of an ongoing effort to preserve the imperiled eastern hemlock tree species, researchers from North Carolina State University have successfully located the most genetically diverse populations of the species in the southern portion of its range. They hope that by collecting the seeds from these trees the species–which is suffering both from insect infestation and prolonged drought conditions–can be saved from extinction.
Dr. Kevin Potter, research assistant professor in the Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources at NC State, and colleagues from Camcore, the largest international tree conservation partnership in the world, surveyed 20 separate populations of eastern hemlock in the southeastern United States to determine which ones contained the most genetic diversity. Their findings appear in the March edition of the journal New Forests.
Eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) is an aesthetically and ecologically important species of tree found from eastern Canada to the Great Lakes states and south along the entire Appalachian mountain range. Since the hemlock tends to grow alongside streams, it plays an important role in regulating water temperature, and its loss could affect the many species of fish and insect life that inhabit mountain streams.
The tree is threatened by the prolific spread of an exotic insect known as the hemlock wooly adelgid (Adelges tsugae), which kills the trees in as few as four years. In the past decade, the hemlock wooly adelgid has infested more than 50 percent of the eastern portion of the hemlock's range, and the number is expected to grow because the adelgid, an introduced species from Asia, has no natural predators in North America.
Some researchers believe the best hope for the tree's salvation lies in "ex situ," or "off-site," preservation efforts, like those spearheaded by Camcore. Ex situ preservation involves collecting seeds from a species and planting them in preservation areas in other countries, with the hope that the species can one day be reintroduced.
Potter and his colleagues studied 20 populations of eastern hemlock scattered throughout the Southeast, an area believed to have served as a population refuge for the tree during the last ice age. They discovered the greatest genetic variation in isolated populations located on the eastern side of the Appalachian range, with a trend of decreased genetic diversity moving west into the Appalachians and to the opposite side of the mountain chain. The results will guide Camcore's collection efforts.
"You need as much genetic diversity as possible in your sample," says Potter, who conducted the research while a post-doctoral fellow with Camcore. "When a species goes through this sort of a 'genetic bottleneck' event, where its numbers really decline, you may find that the survivors may express traits that are beneficial in terms of surviving insect infestation, but that they've lost traits that help them survive other events, like drought. For preservation to be successful, you need trees with the largest possible variety of beneficial traits."
Source: NC State University, by Tracey Peake
Related stories:
Japanese beetle may help fight hemlock-killing insect
The eastern hemlock, a tall, long-lived coniferous tree that shelters river and streamside ecosystems throughout the eastern United States and Canada, is in serious danger of extinction because a tiny, non-native insect is literally sucking the life out of it.
Loss of hemlocks will affect water dynamics in southern Appalachian forests
Forest Service (FS) research has provided the first estimates on the impact the loss of eastern hemlock will have on the water dynamics of the southern Appalachian mountains. In the June 2007 issue of Ecological Applications, researchers Chelcy Ford and Jim Vose from the FS Southern Research Station (SRS) Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory present findings on eastern hemlock rates of transpiration (the amount of soil water taken up by trees) from a 2-year study in western North Carolina.
Professor talks about latest in Younger Dryas work in Science article
University of Cincinnati Professor of Geology Tom Lowell is featured in the July 18 issue of Science, discussing the latest research into the question of whether the significant climate change event about 12,900 years ago known as Younger Dryas impacted the climate all around the globe.
Stink bugs are on the move across Pennsylvania
(PhysOrg.com) -- They're big, they're distinctively aromatic, and they're coming to a home near you. Stink bugs are on the move across Pennsylvania and a bug expert in Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences says we should get ready for an extended stay.
Leatherback turtles' newly discovered migration route may be roadmap to salvation
With a name like "Leatherback Turtle" you might think the sea turtles could stand up to just about anything the ocean can throw at them, and for more than a hundred million years, they have. But tough, long-lived critters though they are, the population of leatherbacks in the eastern Pacific Ocean has plummeted by over 90 percent in the last 20 years.
Abandoned baby panda adopted by cat at Dutch zoo
A baby panda rejected by its mother has been adopted by a domestic cat which is suckling the animal along with its own young, Amsterdam's Artis zoo said Wednesday.
Seasonal programmed brain cell death foiled in living birds
Neurons in brains of one songbird species equipped with a built-in suicide program that kicks in at the end of the breeding season have been kept alive for seven days in live birds by researchers trying to understand the role that steroid hormones play in the growth and maintenance of the neural song system.
Tigers disappear from Himalayan refuge
World Wildlife Fund (WWF) is alarmed by the dramatic decline of at least 30 percent in the Bengal tiger population of Suklaphanta Wildlife Reserve in Nepal, once a refuge that boasted among the highest densities of the endangered species in the Eastern Himalayas. The recent survey of April 2008 showed a population of between 6-14 tigers, down from 20-50 tigers in 2005.
[Home]
[Full version]