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18922


Date: December 07, 2023 at 09:54:42
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: How do coastal Redwoods recover so quickly from fires?

URL: https://www.santacruzsentinel.com/2023/12/06/study-finds-redwoods-store-buds-carbon-for-fire-events/?utm_email=E46CB449B4EEF4848461752F67&g2i_eui=Dfb9LFmCsBQxiFwekt9Dky%2bbtBEdqRf7C3nHrRzBZHw%3d&g2i_source=newsletter&active=no&utm_source=listrak&utm_medium


Study finds redwoods store buds, carbon for fire events
Dormant buds possibly centuries old

By ARIC SLEEPER | asleeper@santacruzsentinel.com
PUBLISHED: December 6, 2023 at 3:36 p.m. | UPDATED:
December 6, 2023 at 3:36 p.m.

BOULDER CREEK — A recently published, multiyear study
about the recovery of redwood trees in Big Basin
Redwoods State Park after the CZU Lightning Complex
fires shows that long-stored carbon reserves and
ancient, dormant buds within redwood trees allow the
plants to recover quickly after a catastrophic fire.

The study was sponsored by the National Science
Foundation and Save the Redwoods League, with
additional support from California State Parks and
Sempervirens Fund, and was authored by a team of
scientists and researchers from Northern Arizona
University led by Drew Peltier, biologist and assistant
professor at University of Nevada, Las Vegas, formerly
with Northern Arizona University.

“Some of the results of this study suggest many of the
redwoods at Big Basin were actually well prepared for
this fire event,” said Peltier in a statement. “Coast
redwoods are extremely fire-adapted and perhaps unusual
in that they resprout after disturbances like fire. We
were amazed to discover how they actually do that
physiologically.”

The 2020 CZU Lightning Complex fires spanned more than
135 square miles in the Santa Cruz Mountains and burned
about 97% of Big Basin Redwoods State Parks, destroying
nearly every structure and laying waste to the park’s
flora and fauna.

According to the study, long-living organisms such as
coast redwoods often develop “insurance strategies” to
increase their resilience in times of resource
shortages, stress or traumatic events such as pest
outbreaks and wildfires. After a fire, burned redwoods
recover by resprouting from roots, trunk and branches,
which are supported by reserves of carbon, consisting
primarily of sugars and starch, within the tree that
can be years and even decades old.

The research team from Northern Arizona University
collected samples of small redwood tree sprouts at Big
Basin following the CZU fires. Using a unique mini
carbon dating tool at Northern Arizona University, the
team studied the samples to determine the age of carbon
reserves used to grow new leaves.

Researchers estimated that in some of the trees that
were studied, up to half of the sprout carbon was
created through photosynthesis nearly 60 years prior.
According to the study, direct use of this old carbon
has rarely been documented and never in such large, old
trees as some of the old-growth trees in Big Basin that
are more than 1,500 years old.

Dormant sprouts emerged from buds that are estimated to
be waiting for a traumatic event under redwood bark for
centuries. According to the study, “For organisms with
millennial lifespans, traits enabling survival of
infrequent but catastrophic events may represent an
important energy sink. Remobilization of decades-old
photosynthate after disturbance demonstrates
substantial amounts of nonstructural carbon within
ancient trees’ cycles on slow, multidecadal
timescales.”

“The CZU Fire consumed all of the leaves on some of the
tallest and oldest trees in the world, yet many are
recovering,” said George Koch, professor of biological
sciences at Northern Arizona University, in a
statement. “Redwoods’ scientific name is sempervirens,
which means ever-flourishing. It’s very satisfying to
have learned a bit more about how this remarkable
species lives up to its name.”

As part of the study, the team installed cameras in Big
Basin’s tree canopy to monitor the progression of
growth. The cameras are part of the university’s
PhenoCam Network, which tracks vegetation growth and
seasonal changes in ecosystems around the globe.

“This fascinating research reveals how coast redwoods
have been able to adapt and survive for millennia by
drawing on carbon they’ve stored for decades to give
them new life,” said Joanna Nelson, director of science
and conservation planning for Save the Redwoods League
in a statement. “These discoveries underscore why we
have to protect the last remaining old-growth redwood
trees, use best forest management practices and
continue to restore younger second-growth forests, so
they’ll have the capacity for resilience to future
wildfires and other effects of climate change.”


Responses:
[18949] [18950] [18923] [18924] [18925]


18949


Date: December 12, 2023 at 19:06:22
From: eaamon, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: How do coastal Redwoods recover so quickly from fires?


when a redwood burns the root system pre-starts the growth of many up to 8
other redwood trees from the active root system.
some people call them suckers, but it is how they survive. the remains feed the new growths.


Responses:
[18950]


18950


Date: December 12, 2023 at 21:39:33
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: How do coastal Redwoods recover so quickly from fires?


I lived in the redwoods for over 20 yrs. We called them
"fairy rings".


Responses:
None


18923


Date: December 07, 2023 at 10:39:49
From: Jeff/Lake Almanor,CA, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Carbon is a element of life


Life is carbon.



I think I just wrote a new speech for Kamala.


Responses:
[18924] [18925]


18924


Date: December 07, 2023 at 13:30:47
From: Eve, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Carbon is a element of life


What is the carbon cycle? Carbon is the chemical backbone of all life on Earth. All of the carbon we currently have on Earth is the same amount we have always had. When new life is formed, carbon forms key
molecules like protein and DNA. It's also found in our atmosphere in the form of carbon dioxide or CO2. The carbon cycle is nature's way of reusing carbon atoms, which travel from the atmosphere into
organisms in the Earth and then back into the atmosphere over and over again. Most carbon is stored in rocks and sediments, while the rest is stored in the ocean, atmosphere, and living organisms. These are
the reservoirs, or sinks, through which carbon cycles. The ocean is a giant carbon sink that absorbs carbon. Marine organisms from marsh plants to fish, from seaweed to birds, also produce carbon through
living and dying. Over millions of years, dead organisms can become fossil fuels. When humans burn these fuels for energy, vast amounts of carbon dioxide are released back into the atmosphere. This excess
carbon dioxide changes our climate — increasing global temperatures, causing ocean acidification, and disrupting the planet’s ecosystems.


Blue Carbon
Blue carbon is the term for carbon captured by the world's ocean and coastal ecosystems. Sea grasses, mangroves, salt marshes, and other systems along our coast are very efficient in storing CO2. These areas
also absorb and store carbon at a much faster rate than other areas, such as forests, and can continue to do so for millions of years. The carbon found in coastal soil is often thousands of years old. When
these systems are damaged or disrupted by human activity, an enormous amount of carbon is emitted back into the atmosphere, contributing to climate change.


Responses:
[18925]


18925


Date: December 07, 2023 at 13:38:01
From: Jeff/Lake Almanor,CA, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Carbon is a element of life


Sounds good to me.

Thanks Eve


Responses:
None


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