Friday, June 15, 2012

The railroad tree





Species name: Tsuga canadensis

Common name: Eastern hemlock

Location: Ontario

The Eastern Hemlock is a species of coniferous evergreen tree native to the east coast of North America (the Maritime provinces in Canada, and New England in the United States). This might seem obvious from its name, but I'll profile a plant in a later blog who's common name might sound like it's origins are in North America but they're really not. Most species of hemlock are native to Asia; there are only a few (3 out of the 9 or 10 species in the genus) that are native to North America, and only one native to Ontario (of the other two, one is native to the Carolinas in the United States, the other is native to the west coast of North America near Alaska and northern British Columbia).

Historically, the hemlock tree was very important in the lumber industry not for house building or furniture building materials, but for railway ties. Hemlocks are very slow growing trees, so it would take hundreds of years for a tree to be big enough to cut down to make one post. Trees were felled on the east coast, their bark cut off to make a square shaped log, and they were cut into pieces and shipped off to build the railways across North America. This was an incredibly destructive process, and there are still forests in the eastern half of Canada that have never recovered from this practice (the majority of which ended in the early 1900s when there were no more large Eastern hemlocks left). My PhD supervisor and I went out to a woodlot a couple of summers ago to look for mushrooms and it was one of the few remaining old growth forests that had once been dominated by hemlocks; there are still stumps left of enormous old trees that had been felled. The good thing about leaving all these stumps behind is that some really neat fungi grow on them!

Unfortunately, the Eastern hemlock is under severe threat of population destruction by an invasive pest from Asia (that usually attacks the Asian species of hemlock which are relatively resistant to the insect). The insect is called the hemlock wooly adelgid, and when it latches onto the tree it often gives it a blueish "furry" appearance at the base of the needles. The insects drink the sap from the tree and burrow under the bark, destroying the tree's ability to transport nutrients from the roots to the growing branches, or the photosynthesizing needles to the growing roots. This causes extreme plant stress, more often than not leading to death. The only way to get rid of these adelgids once they attack the tree is to cut the branches off, and any arborist will tell you that hemlocks are especially sensitive to pruning because they are so slow growing. Pruning the ends of branches is fine, but cutting entire branches off should only be done one or two per year to ensure tree survival, not half the tree. Since there is no real treatment for these insects once the infection has started, it can essentially be taken as the kiss of death for the tree, and it should be removed from the garden immediately to prevent the spread. The other aspect of plant removal that must be taken into account is that the tree can't just be mulched or composted! It should be removed from the area and burned to kill the insects and to prevent future infection.

2 comments:

  1. Q du jour - How exactly do we know that a species like Eastern Hemlock is native or not native to North America? What do we do to find these things out ?

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  2. Good question.
    I was going to do an entire blog eventually about how to identify plants the "Jen way", and how to find out if they're native or not.

    Truly, the easiest way is Wikipedia. Sure, academics everywhere will tell you what a crappy resource it is and that it should never be trusted, but to be honest? They're either behind the times or are blatantly lying. Due to the formation of "expert groups" in the academic community, Wikipedia is actually becoming a pretty respectable resource. Still one that I would never want my students to use as a primary reference in a paper, but a good place to start to find out solid information about a topic. Incorrect information on Wikipedia is usually corrected within an hour of posting. Pretty impressive!

    Another great site about plants is Dave's Garden. Each species of plant on their website (mostly ornamental plants, but they have some wacky ones up there) has a "plant file" which gives all of the important information about it, and pictures of this plant if anyone in their community has taken pics of it. They are not like Wikipedia in that anyone can edit a plant file, but if you e-mail the site staff and provide them with a reference for their incorrect information (that's not Wikipedia), they'll have it corrected within the day.

    And something else to remember: just because the plant isn't native, doesn't automatically discount it from being here. Keywords to look for to know if the plant is not in North America are "tropical" (unless it's in a greenhouse, it won't be in Canada), "endemic" (occurs only in one small area of the world), "restricted population" (regardless of historic population range, it now only occurs in one small area of the world), and some form of "not an ornamental/edible plant" (if it's not ornamental or edible, there's no real reason for it to be here for the most part).

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