03/12/15

Garry Oak trial

The Garry oak trial was established by Colin Huebert. A range-wide collection of acorns (2007) was planted first in a greenhouse, then in a common garden in Totem field (2008).

Garry oak in 2008 (top) and 2010 (bottom).

Garry oak in 2008 (top) and 2010 (bottom). Bark chips and landscape cloth help control weed growth.

After a few years, with various people studying aspects of Garry oak, the planting density was  a bit tight. Some trees grew really well.

Garry Oak trial in March 2015

Garry Oak trial in March 2015

A decision was made to thin half of the 1900 trees. The better your trees grow, the more work they require! But, we are not dealing with poplars. Thinning required a chainsaw and a team of helpers. It was definitely a collaborative effort.

Thinning was a collaborative effort.

Thinning was a collaborative effort.

But we had fun nonetheless.

Hard work and fun, too.

Hard work and fun, too.

This work party provides a good opportunity to single out some demonstration trees to illustrate provenance variation.

from top left, clockwise: thinned trees waiting to be chipped; provenance variation; discussing past and future research

from top left, clockwise: thinned trees waiting to be chipped; provenance variation; discussing past and future research

Who knows which other studies will take place in this trial?

02/11/15

The last big push – wrapping up the phenotyping for AdapTree

One last experiment of the AdapTree project remained in the ground: the trial comparing natural and seed orchard seed lots. The roughly 6000 plants were kept for a third season to collect periodic height measurements for the pine, and cold hardiness data for the spruce. The spruce trees announced themselves ready for freeze testing by the end of August, so September was dedicated to needle chopping and conductivity measurements. Thousands of them. Three whole weeks. Those who stuck it out were by then thinking with fond memories of the days gone by when the AdapTree team was large and fresh. But we did it, and the resulting data were clean.

Fig 1: Pine heights, diameters, and harvesting for shoot dry mass

Fig. 1: Pine heights, diameters, data logging and harvesting for shoot dry mass

Nonetheless, it was the middle of October by the time we were performing the final height and diameter measurements on the pine, while simultaneously harvesting them for shoot dry weights. (Figure 1). Harvest time was preferred for diameter measurements because it gives us easy access to the stems. We had sun, we had fog, we had beautiful autumn days and we had rain. Now, we don’t exactly melt from a little rain. But shoving wet plants in wet paper bags which are marked with sticky labels of moderate stickiness is asking for trouble. And while the recording tablets are protected, raindrops beading on a screen are not ideal for visibility. So this became a long, drawn-out affair. Of course, we only take pictures on the nicest days!

Fig. 2: Gradual progress.

Fig. 2: Gradual progress

The ideal team consisted of three people, so we organized our schedules, waited for the rain to stop, and gradually made progress (Figure 2). We finished the pine and thought we’d just continue at the same speed with the spruce. (Figure 3). Not so. While the spruce plants were much smaller than the pine, the stems were thick and asymmetric, with multiple roots spreading horizontally almost before touching the ground. Individual diameter measurements were not very repeatable, so multiple measurements were taken. Rather than taking turns at measuring, recording and bagging, for consistency’s sake all twelve blocks were measured by the same person. The repetitive bending over proved fatiguing.

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Fig. 3 : Some large pine, and the first snowfall

If you wonder what I am holding up: it’s an old toothbrush, to clean the root collar of sand and mud before taking a diameter measurement.

Then we had frost and snow in November! And the frozen ground in combination with the frozen liverworts and moss did not make a good basis for reliable height measurements – who’d have thought frozen bryophytes could bring science to a halt? As the days got shorter and shorter, we completed the heights separately.

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Fig. 4: Dry weights – so many!

In the meantime, shoot dry weights were measured in the lab, to keep the accumulating boxes of dried plants under control. (Figure 4). We didn’t finish before Christmas as planned, and Ian had to wait and wait for his data. With mild weather in the first week of January, we made one last big push, and the last spruce tree was cut on January 9 (Figure 5), with the last dry weights gathered two weeks later.

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Fig. 5 : The last spruce tree is cut …

And now all the plants are gone and no more measurements can possibly be collected from them!!!

I am grateful to all those who helped out (you can see some of them in the pictures!), and for the hot tub in the swimming pool. Did I mention the guys who (re)built the raised beds in the first place (Figure 6) ? And the summer students who helped sowing, and the technicians and students who collected weekly height measurements (Figure 7) ?

 

Fig. 6 : Re-building the beds ...

Fig. 6 : Re-building the beds …

 

Fig. 7 : Sowing, observing, measuring, ...

Fig. 7 : Sowing, observing, DNA collection, measuring, …

 

10/24/14

The Big Tree Registry on Radio Canada

Nous avons eu plusieurs billets sur le blog concernant le registre Big Tree ces derniers temps. Pour tous les francophones qui voudraient en savoir plus, Joane Elleouet, du laboratoire de Sally Aitken, a été interviewée en studio lundi dernier au sujet du projet. A écouter ici.

We’ve had a couple posts about the Big Tree Registry on the blog lately. For any francophones out there interested in learning more, Aitken lab member Joane Elleouet did a Radio Canada interview last Monday on the project. You can listen online here.

(French translation courtesy of Joane.)

10/24/14

The Aitken Lab on The Nature of Things

Back in February, Pia described the excitement of a film crew’s visit to the lab, and now we have the results to share with you! This past Thursday, Sally and many members of the lab were featured on The Nature of Things in an episode entitled Dreams of the Future. It’s available to watch online if you’re in Canada. While I’m not encouraging you to skip ahead, the Aitken lab segment starts about 35-40 minutes in.

10/21/14

Welcome to the Internet Big Trees!

Registry committee member Ralf Kelman standing next to tree #320, the Wesbrook Ravine grand fir.

Registry committee member Ralf Kelman standing next to tree #320, the Wesbrook Ravine grand fir.

On September 25th, 2014, the BC Big Tree Registry was officially released to the world. Started in the 1980s by the infamous BC naturalist Randy Stoltmann (see article below), the registry contains the measurements and whereabouts of BCs most remarkable trees. Previous to the new online, publicly accessible database, the registry existed as a pile of difficult to navigate forms and pictures crammed into several banker’s boxes. Now, anyone with a computer and an internet connection can go online and nominate new trees or search out old ones. The bulk of this transformation was made possible through the hard work of Christine Chourmouzis and Bert terHart, with help from the registry committee and an Aitken lab member here and there.

The release party was held in the atrium of the Forestry building on the UBC Vancouver campus. The faculty of Forestry, and more specifically the Centre for Forest Conservation Genetics, is where the registry now calls home! A couple excited speeches preceded a sushi lunch, which was followed by a tree climbing demonstration.

Dr. Sally Aitken (left) helped bring the registry to the Faculty of Forestry. Christine Chourmouzis (right) was instrumental in the process of publicizing the registry.

Dr. Sally Aitken (left) helped bring the registry to the Faculty of Forestry. Christine Chourmouzis (right) was instrumental in the process of publicizing the registry.

The registry exists in order to identify, describe, monitor, and conserve the magnificent arboreal features of British Columbia. This is open source information for the public to access, go see the big trees for themselves, and find and nominate new trees so that others can do the same. The registry is always appreciative of new or updated information like tree health, photos, and growth. With the registry becoming completely digital, this sort of civilian maintenance should result in the most comprehensive Big Tree Registry to date.

Big tree climbing gear.

Big tree climbing gear.

Links to news articles and videos about the launch:

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/b-c-bigtree-registry-wants-your-nominations-1.2800114

http://www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/tree-huggers-rejoice-b-c-s-largest-trees-now-catalogued-in-online-database-1.2031540

http://globalnews.ca/video/1583945/bctree-registry-launched/

http://globalnews.ca/video/1616469/bc-big-tree-registry-needs-your-help/

Don’t try this at home.

Don’t try this at home.