9
MD
the washington post
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thursday, august
1
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2019
that works in your soils and
climate but is a medium to slow
grower. It will have stronger
wood and stay in bounds. There
are many beautiful trees that are
of this continent, but a tree
doesn’t have to be native to be
virtuous.
As increased temperatures
and extreme weather events
become more frequent, the
challenge is to pick tougher
trees. Peter Del Tredici, a
lecturer in ecology at MIT,
recommends bottomland species
— pin and willow oaks, for
example — and trees that are
inherently adaptable, such as the
ginkgo. Most conifers find it too
hot in low-elevation urban
environments, with the
exception of the bald cypress.
“That can take a tremendous
amount of heat,” he said.
Del Tredici said the recent
heat wave “is a precursor of
coming attractions. We have to
think about future conditions
and which trees are more
tolerant of heat and drought.”
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dioxide and water, with nobody
feeding us steaks or raspberries.”
On a micro level, trees shelter
us from the infernal summer
sun. On a macro level and in an
age of global warming, the
ability of trees to cool the
environment while exchanging
carbon dioxide for oxygen makes
tree planting a no-brainer.
A study published July 5 by
scientists in the Crowther Lab in
Zurich identified more than
2 billion acres of land worldwide
that is not densely settled or
used for agriculture and could
be forested to buffer climate
change. Once mature, such
forests could capture
200 gigatonnes of additional
carbon. I’m not sure what a
gigatonne is, but it sounds like a
lot.
Human societies are complex
and fractious and we live in the
age of mammon, so there will be
obstacles to such an idea. But we
can plant trees individually, or
see to it that our street trees are
planted and cared for.
This is my standard advice
about selecting and planting a
tree: Be patient and plant a
small tree, which establishes
better than pricey big ones; give
it space to grow; and pick a tree
trees with extensive roots
sytems, but trees planted in the
past three years still need help
when it’s hot and dry.
They should get an inch of
water a week during the growing
season; some experts say two
inches during heat spells. Casey
Trees offers rain gauges and
electronic alerts to help folks
water young trees.
At the State Arboretum of
Virginia in Blandy, Va., arborist
Chris Schmidt spent much of the
first day of the recent heat wave
getting water to young trees
there, including rare franklinia
trees she has grown from seed.
She recounted this while sitting
under the shade of an old white
pine.
We can retreat indoors if we
have to. But Forrest, who has
been around trees his whole
career, still marvels at what they
can endure.
They stand out in freezing
weather, in blistering heat, in
hurricanes, during droughts,
and yet they soldier on while
giving us (and other, more furry
creatures) shelter and
sustenance. We wouldn’t last
long as trees, he muses.
“Particularly if you had to get
food from sunlight and carbon
The second stratagem is to
close the microscopic pores —
stomates — found mostly on the
undersides of the leaves. This
shuts down transpiration and
the gaseous exchanges needed
for photosynthesis, in which the
tree takes in carbon dioxide and
releases water and oxygen.
When the heat is prolonged
and the rain dries up, our
temperate hardwoods react in
progressively drastic ways,
Forrest said. First they wilt, then
the leaves show signs of
scorching and then the leaves
drop prematurely. He likens it to
getting a tan, then sunburn, then
heat stroke.
Tony Aiello, of the Morris
Aboretum in Philadelphia, is less
worried when trees go into
stress mode after early August
because by then they have made
most of their growth and
carbohydrate stores for the year.
Late July’s extreme heat — the
heat index was in the triple
digits — was mitigated by its
brevity and the abundant
rainfall of recent weeks. “If we
hadn’t had the rain I think we
would see a lot more leaves
falling, a lot more browning,” he
said.
That applies to established
As you dodge
sunbeams on a
hellaciously hot
and humid
summer’s day, it’s
worth
remembering that
you have a
constant friend
willing to take a
photon to save
you.
We refer of course to the
humble tree, so seemingly
passive and yet so instrumental
in getting us through high
summer in Washington. If its
beauty were not enough, or its
ability to mitigate greenhouse
gases, the shade the tree
provides is a real measure of
relief from excessive summer
heat. It can feel 15 degrees cooler
beneath an old oak or maple,
and a stand of them can create a
breeze as they forge their own
microclimate.
In an age of universal air
conditioning, the sheltering
value of a tree has become less
obvious, along with the
phenomena that allow it to ride
out the heat wave in a way that
we could not. Our forebears
understood the value of getting
to leafier, higher ground, even
before expanses of asphalt and
concrete created the heat islands
of the modern city.
Chip Tynan, horticulturist at
the Missouri Botanical Garden,
said St. Louis has removed trees
from once-leafy boulevards in
advance of their slow death by
the emerald ash borer. “It has
created a whole lot of very hot
streets,” he said.
Trees are, among other things,
great columns of water, drawing
moisture from the soil and
exhaling it through the leaves. It
has been estimated that a single
apple orchard can lift 16 tons of
water a day.
This is not to say that trees are
not stressed by this heat or have
not had to adopt mechanisms to
cope with it.
As temperatures climb into
triple digits and humidity raises
the heat index to insane levels,
trees adopt two basic and related
strategies, said Todd Forrest, vice
president for horticulture and
living collections at the New
York Botanical Garden.
The first is to wilt. Prolonged
wilting in drought-stressed
plants, especially young ones,
can be deadly, but temporary
wilting on established trees and
shrubs is a defense mechanism
and can occur even if soil
moisture is adequate. By folding
its leaves, the plant reduces its
foliar surface area to sunlight
and reduces the evaporative
effects of the wind.
Trees can’t escape the heat, but they’re pretty good at handling it
Adrian
Higgins
GARDENING
Home
KATHERINE FREY/THE WASHINGTON POST
Trees stand between us and the sun to provide welcome relief from summer’s heat. Scientists in Switzerland have identified 2 billion acres
of land worldwide that could be forested to mitigate the effects of climate change. Trees release oxygen and capture carbon as they feed.