OWLS Quarterly, Eighth Edition

Page 7

LIFE OF TREES: HOW THEY

per year has increased the rates of tree death. Trees have now become both a key tool as a carbon sink and a hindrance with their deaths14. We need to bring back the wonderful life and world that trees have created for us by making sure that their remarkable life process is not beaten down by disease or deforestation. It must be limited by the actions of governing bodies.

SUSTAIN A MILLENNIAL LIFE Alina Nishat (OHS) Trees are widely regarded as the pre-eminent symbol of growth, death, and rebirth across many cultures, with people fascinated by their ancient and majestic structures. The phrase ‘Tree of Life’ highlights that it supports all life and has always been there to do so. But how is it that trees, be it spiritually or physically, have supported life for so long? The oldest single tree in the world is 5062 years old, and the oldest clonal colony of Pando trees is a bewildering 80,000 years old! How do they live for so long?

Bibliography https://www.researchgate.net/publication/11094822_ Why_do_trees_live_so_long https://www.tanzania-experience.com/blog/acaciasclever-species-of-trees/ https://www.fs.fed.us/psw/publications/groover/ psw_2017_groover001.pdf

During the process of aging, tissue repair in animals slows down over the years and thus organs become weaker due to senescence. However, plants are perpetually embryonic; this means that their cells can convert into any other type of cell by undergoing mitosis many times. This is essentially why plants can keep growing indeterminately11 and are ‘immortal’. However, there are external factors which pose a threat to their life, for which trees have a very good system in place.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/ thousands-year-old-ginkgo-trees-genetic-elixirlife-180974004/ https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ article-7882543/Trees-live-CENTURIES-thanksimmune-protective-chemicals.html https://www.indefenseofplants.com/blog/2018/1/23/ how-trees-fight-disease https://www.realclearscience.com/blog/2014/11/ do_trees_die_of_old_age.

If a group of cells is diseased, the tree cannot ‘kill’ the pathogen but isolates it by forming a wall made of the outer cambium layer. This is why sometimes you will see dull, dead looking patches on a tree; they are the isolated patches of diseased cells. The tree then instantly starts a race against the disease to grow at a faster rate than the disease is (if it does, more layers of meristematic cells12 from the cambium strengthen the isolating wall).

https://www.usda.gov/media/pressreleases/2016/11/18/new-aerial-survey-identifiesmore-100-million-dead-trees-california https://www.purdue.edu/newsroom/releases/2019/ Q3/invasive-pests-kill-so-many-trees-each-year,-itsequal-to-5-million-car-emissions.html Taylor, D.J, Green, N., Stout, G.W. (1997). Biological Science 1& 2. Cambridge: University Press

This is the basic system of all trees, but individual species have developed weird and wonderful defence systems of their own. One particularly interesting example is the Acacia tree. It releases a toxin called tannin when an animal, such as the giraffe, comes to eat it (this can be lethal). However, they also release the chemical ‘Ethelyn’ which travels up to 45m and subsequently ‘warns’ the other acacia trees. This chemical also attracts stinging ants, who form a rigorous bodyguard system for the trees!

11

Eventually they stop growing taller as it becomes impossible for xylem tubes to transport water up so high, however they still continue to grow wider! 12

These are unspecified STEM-cell like cells used for mitosis.

13

Statistic recorded in 2016 from 2010.

14

Environmentally, the dead biomass contributes to carbon in the atmosphere. Socially, dead unsheltered trees are prone to forest fires and cause visual pollution.

Despite these defences, there are still so many trees dying. According to their biological capabilities, our carbon sink should be thriving. We know that tree felling is a major cause, with 15 billion trees cut down per year. Diseases from pests are also on the rise, particularly in places such as California, where 102 million beech trees13 died due to the Ips Beetle. However, ecologists are still seeing a shorter lifespan for trees growing in forests, for example. Although the evidence is not yet definitive, there is strong theory that the hotter summers and a disparity in the precipitation 7


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WHERE DOES THE WORD ‘TREE’ COME FROM?

3min
page 38

IN WHAT WAY DOES THE DEPICION OF TREES IN IMAGIST POEMS HELP US TO FACE CLIMATE ISSUES TODAY?

6min
pages 35-37

THE MEDICINAL USE OF TREES

3min
pages 33-34

THE GERMANS’ LOVE OF TREES – DOES THIS STEM FROM LITERATURE?

3min
page 32

WHY DO TREES FEATURE SO OFTEN IN CHILDREN’S BOOKS?

2min
pages 29-30

HOW CAN MERGER TREES AND TECHNOLOGY BE USED TO MAP DARK MATTER?

3min
page 31

THE GREAT GREEN WALL’ – HOW TREES ARE BEING USED TO COMBATE CLIMATE CHANGE

2min
page 28

THE SEED FROM A TREE OR THE CURE TO GLOBAL THIRST?

2min
page 27

THE CLOSE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TREES, ART & CULTURE

4min
pages 25-26

HOW HAVE TREES SHAPED THE FORMATION OF LANGUAGE?

3min
page 24

IS DARWIN’S TREE OF LIFE TRUTH OR A VISUAL TOOL FOR EVOLUTION?

3min
page 22

WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM NATIVE AMERICANS’ USE OF TREES?

2min
page 23

CAN TREES TEACH US ANYTHING?

4min
pages 19-20

HOW ARE TREES USED IN 20TH AND 21ST CENTURY ART

3min
pages 16-17

DOES MONEY ACTUALLY GROW ON TREES?

4min
page 18

WHAT WAS THE IMPACT OF TREES IN THE VIETNAM WAR?

2min
page 21

ROOTS

4min
pages 14-15

INCORPORATING TREES INTO ARCHITECTURE

4min
pages 11-13

LIFE OF TREES: HOW THEY SUSTAIN A MILLENNIAL LIFE

3min
page 7

TREE SYMBOLISM IN VIRGINIA WOOLF’S MRS DALLOWAY

3min
page 10

HOW DOES THE TREE OF LANGUAGES HOLD UP IN 2020

2min
page 9

HAVE TREES BEEN SECRETLY SAVING US FROM PANDEMICS?

2min
page 3

IS THERE A FUTURE FOR NATURALLY SOURCED BREAST CANCER TREATMENT?

2min
page 5

TREES IN MYTHOLOGY

2min
page 4

WHAT SYMBOLISMS DO TREES HAVE IN CHINESE CULTURE?

2min
page 6

CHEMIS-TREE: THE IMPORTANT ROLE NATURE PLAYS IN MODERN MEDICINE

2min
page 8
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