This
tree needs to be domesticated. Hybridization could also help to
prepare a cultivar able to prosper in the boreal forest. We have
already identified a couple of other such likely plants but a tree
quite able to supplant the wild tree cover and that is also highly
productive of ripe seed cones is an ideal option.
The
apparent potential productivity also looks promising and they should
be easy to harvest. The competition from the birds and squirrels can
be partially suppressed by an active population of martens and
fishers and their cousins. One has to get in to do the harvest as
soon as the cones are ready from the sound of it.
One
by one, we are identifying cultivars for the boreal forest and there
remains no doubt that it can be done.
The
problems talked about here will pass through a natural cycle and in
time fully recover.
Mountain pine
beetles threaten endangered whitebark pines
By Larry Pynn,
Vancouver Sun January 21, 2013
Mountain pine beetles
have hammered more than B.C.’s lodgepole pine forests — they’ve
taken endangered whitebark pine trees, robbing Interior grizzly bears
and other species of an important food supply.
Slow-growing whitebark
pine trees are rarer than lodgepole pine, grow at higher elevations,
and produce cones with large seeds that form a food source for
Clark’s nutcracker (which disperses them across the landscape), red
squirrels, chipmunks, and pre-denning black bears and grizzlies. The
latter species are of special concern in Canada.
Native people have
also long eaten the seeds raw or roasted.
A new study by the
University of Wisconsin-Madison, published in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences, reports that a warmer climate has
“increased access of native bark beetles to high-elevation pines
that historically received only intermittent exposure.”
The study explains
that whitebark pine have “inferior defences against mountain pine
beetle compared with its historical lower-elevation host, lodgepole
pine” and are vulnerable to “temperature-driven range
expansions.”
Wayne McCrory, a
consulting bear biologist from the Kootenays, said areas of the
Chilcotin have some of the largest stands of whitebark pine in
Western Canada. He said grizzlies are known to raid squirrel
seed-caches and two of four grizzly scats he examined in the upper
Taseko watershed last fall “were all pine-cone residue.”
Under ideal
conditions, one baseball-sized cone can harbour 100 or more pea-sized
seeds.
Whitebark pine in B.C.
and Alberta are federally listed as endangered due to climate change,
spread of the mountain pine beetle and white pine blister rust, as
well as encroachment of subalpine fir and Engelmann spruce into the
pine’s habitat due to human suppression of forest fires.
To help save the
whitebark pine, a non-profit society has been formed to collect
seeds, especially from healthy trees in stands riddled with blister
rust. Some seeds are stored for future use and some are used for
replanting seedlings.
Biologist Randy Moody,
director of the recently formed Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation
of Canada, said pine beetles go through a stand and kill the trees
relatively quickly, whereas blister rust is a “slow burn” that
poses a greater threat over the longer term.
A 2010 report by the
Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada noted the
slow-growing whitebark pine does not produce sizable cone crops for
60 years and can live 500 to 1,000 years.
About 56 per cent of
the tree’s habitat is in Canada, extending from the U.S. border to
about 200 kilometres north of Fort St. James on the dry eastern side
of the Coast Mountains and to about 150 kilometres north of Jasper in
the Rocky Mountains.
COSEWIC estimates
whitebark pine occupies about 561,000 hectares in B.C., of which
about 34 per cent is infected with white pine blister rust, a disease
introduced from Eurasia. It predicts about 70 per cent of B.C.’s
whitebark pine habitat will be lost by 2055.
By comparison, the
Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations estimates
mountain pine beetle infestation in lodgepole pine trees covers more
than 18 million hectares.
Mountain pine beetles
have hammered more than B.C.’s lodgepole pine forests — they’ve
taken endangered whitebark pine trees, robbing Interior grizzly bears
and other species of an important food supply. Slow-growing whitebark
pine trees are rarer than lodgepole pine, grow at higher elevations,
and produce cones with large seeds that form a food source for
Clark’s nutcracker (which disperses them across the landscape), red
squirrels, chipmunks, and pre-denning black bears and grizzlies. The
latter species are of special concern in Canada.
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