Innovation Anthology #45: Professor, Chemical Engineering and Director, Imperial Oil-Alberta Ingenuity Centre for Oil Sands Innovation

Dr. Christian Messier and son

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In school we’re taught you can tell the age of a tree by counting its rings. But that’s not always the case.

Under stressful conditions, some trees like balsam fir don’t bother making any rings at all So what looks like a small fifteen year old tree may actually be one that’s a hundred years old.

That’s the finding of Dr. Christian Messier and his colleagues at the University of Quebec.

DR. CHRISTIAN MESSIER: And what had happened is these small trees are very flimsy. So when the snow falls on them in the winter, they are pushed underground. And these trees have the ability to produce roots when they touch the ground. That’s what we call adventurous roots. And so the stem, or the part that was above ground that was a stem becomes a root. So the tree maintains itself very small because it continually does that. It’s pushed on the forest floor, it produces roots, then it gets rid of the old part of the root system underground and it stays small.

By counting root scars, Dr. Messier determined some trees actually spent forty years underground. It’s a strategy these trees evolved to survive under a dark canopy until a gap appears and they can prosper.

Thanks today to The Sustainable Forest Management Network.

FOR INNOVATION ANTHOLOGY, I’M CHERYL CROUCHER

Guest

Murray Gray PhD, PEng, FCIC, FEIC, FCAE,

University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, gray@ualberta.ca

Sponsor

Sustainable Forest Management Network

Established in 1995, The Sustainable Forest Management Network is one of Canada's 22 Networks of Centres of Excellence. The SFMN administrative center is hosted at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The Network brings together top scientists, forest managers and practitioners, First Nations leaders and governments to address known and emerging challenges to forest sustainability.

 

Program Date: 2007-07-03