RESISTANT VITALITY OF THE REDWOODS
THE QUESTION is often asked, "Why do the Sequoias
live so long?" The answer is probably to be found in the fact that,
whether dead or alive, they are remarkably resistant to the natural
enemies of the forest. In general, there are three important enemies of
dead or living mature trees: namely, insects, fungi, and fire.
Insectskillers of forests.Oaks may be
harmfully affected or killed by as many as two hundred different kinds
of insects. Many other trees are killed by insects, or are so weakened
by them that they die from decay. Great numbers of Sugar Pine and of the
western Yellow Pine have been killed by beetles, but the Sierra Redwood,
although it grows in the same forests, seems to be quite free from any
serious affection by any insect. The Coast Redwood is sometimes attacked
by the larva of a very small insect which reduces the bark just under
the surface to a fine powder; this does not, however, imperil the life
of the tree.
Not only is the living Redwood tree very resistant to
the work of insects, but so is its lumber. In tropical regions, among
the worst destroyers of wooden houses are the termites. These insects
(incorrectly called "white ants") are a type of social insect living in
colonies. Their food is chiefly cellulose, a substance which forms a
rather large part of the composition of all plants. The termites, acting
as nature's scavengers, reduce the brush and debris of forest and
jungle to a condition from which is developed humus or mulch. Numerous
species of termites are found in the Tropics, of which at least three
are of economic importance in the United States. Sapwood (which is the
outer cream-colored wood just under the bark) even of Redwood is not
naturally termite-resistant; but Redwood lumber made of heartwood and
used in the Philippine Islands, Mexico, and the United States has
successfully resisted termite attacks for from forty to fifty-five
years.
Fungislow destroyers of forests.Fungi are
colorless plants that are not able to manufacture their own food, but
must use extraneous materials. Saprophytic fungi, or
saprophytesfor example, mushrooms, bread mold, and
puffballslive on dead substances; parasitic fungi, or
parasitesfor example, corn smut, wheat rust, and grape
mildewlive on living plants. Fungi often kill living plants and
cause dead plants to become decayed.
Redwoods have seldom, if ever, been known to die from
attacks by fungi. Most other trees, if injured by fire, or by
the careless breaking of limbs, soon become infected with fungi, and are
likely to die as a result. Both species of Redwood are indeed often
found with a small amount of "heart" rot, but since heartwood is
nonliving tissue the life of the tree is not imperiled. It is probable,
however, that many of the trees become so-called chimney or telescope
trees through the burning of the "rot" at the center of the tree.
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COAST REDWOOD TREE OF MUIR WOODS, DAMAGED BY FIRE BUT NOT DESTROYED
Courtesy of Muir Woods National Monument
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The unusual resistance of Redwoods to the attacks of
both insects and fungi is thought to result from the presence, among
other chemical agents, of a chemical known as tannin. This is a
substance occurring in hemlocks, oaks, and many other trees, from which
it is extracted and used in tanning leather. It has also been used
recently as a remedy for burns on the human body. The Redwoods have a
high percentage of tannin, and this gives both the bark and the
heartwood a reddish color during the life of the tree. Tannin is also
abundant in the cone, where it forms about seven-tenths of the substance
known as cone pigment. If a tree falls and breaks, the tannin soon
covers the broken ends of the tree, giving it the appearance of having
been burned or creosoted, and this natural treatment protects the wood
from decay.
Among the earliest white settlers in California was a
small band of Russians who established a colony in the Redwood country
at what is now Fort Ross, Sonoma County, about 100 miles north of San
Francisco. This Russian colony more than a hundred years ago built
numerous buildings hewn from the native Coast Redwood. One of these
buildings, a church, still stands at the original site, and is a notable
example of the durability of Redwood. As telegraph poles, piling,
tunnel timbers, tanks, bridge towers, pipe lines, fence posts, bridges,
sills, railroad tunnel timber, floor joists, and railroad trestles,
Redwood has persisted with remarkably little decay for periods ranging
in duration from 30 to 150 years.
Trees which have lain in the forest for centuries can
still be used for lumber. In 1925, American Forests and Forest Life
reported the following example of the durability of a Redwood which had
been down for more than 340 years. Three hemlocks, 235, 250, and 340
years old, respectively, were growing directly over a Redwood, which was
78 inches in diameter. The living hemlocks had evidently started from
seed that had lodged on the fallen Redwood trunk, and there sprouted.
The roots of the seedlings continued to grow on and around the fallen
tree until they gained a foothold in the surrounding soil. The fallen
tree was still in a sound condition.
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SIERRA REDWOOD TREE GROWING NEAR AURORA, NEW YORK
Courtesy of Clyde Fisher
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Firequick destroyer of forests.Fire is
the great quick destroyer of forests. Acres upon acres of the finest
forests of the world are consumed annually by destructive fires. The
pine and the fir trees are highly inflammable because of the pitch they
contain. Evidence of early-day fires is apparent in many places
throughout the Redwood regions, and many of the fire scars can be used
to date the time of the occurrence of the fires.
Redwoods, however, contain neither pitch nor resin;
furthermore, since the asbestos-like bark grows to at least one foot in
thickness in the Coast Redwood, and often as much as two feet in
thickness in the Sierra Redwood, fire seldom is able to kill these
trees. Once in a great while, fire will go up the trunk of a Sequoia,
burn the crown, and thus kill the tree. Both kinds of Redwood are thus
exceedingly resistant to fire and its effects. Of course, hot fires will
kill the young Redwoods, but once the trees have reached maturity they
are not easily killed.
Although Indians have been blamed for setting fires
which have burned Redwoods, probably many of the fires, if not all, were
started by lightning. As many as six lightning fires have been known to
occur in the Yosemite in one day. If fires have occurred no oftener than
once in a hundred years, some of the older trees must have been attacked
at least twenty times in their lifetime. Once a fire was started, it
swept through the forest, burning pines, firs, and young Sequoias, but
seldom killing a mature Sequoia. Most of the Sierra Redwoods show fire
scars on the upper side, where dead branches and leaves have
accumulated.
The Telescope Tree in the Mariposa Grove and the
Chimney Tree in Big Basin show how these trees may continue for
centuries to remain vigorous though their heart is burned out. How can
a tree continue to live with the heartwood burned out? The term
"heartwood" is really a misnomer, in that it suggests the animal heart,
which is essential to the life of an animal. Heartwood is composed of
cells which have ceased to live. The outer layers of the wood of a tree,
known as sapwood, are the live part of the wood. Through the sapwood,
water and minerals are conducted up from the roots. Food is manufactured
by the green leaves in the presence of sunshine, and the food is
conducted down to the various parts of the tree through the inner layers
of bark.
Since the Sierra Redwood does not sprout from the
base, trees which have been killed by fire cannot continue to
reforest the area. The Coast Redwood, however, reproduces abundantly by
forming sprouts around the base of parent trees. There are
sections of country along the Redwood Highway where farmers have tried
to use cut over Redwood land for agricultural purposes. But even after
as many as ten successive years of heavy burning of the stumps on a
cut-over region, sprouts have still continued to come up, so that the
farmers frequently surrender to the persistent Redwoods.
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YOUNG SIERRA REDWOOD IN MARIPOSA GROVE
Courtesy of Yosemite National Park
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