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The Survivors: Sugar Pine Trees and the Future Forest

Planting Genetic Resilience Into Forests in the Face of Climate Change

California鈥檚 drought and bark-beetle infestation killed more than 129 million trees between 2012 and 2016 in the Sierra Nevada. But amid the devastation stood some survivors.

At the time, swag外流 biologist Patricia Maloney and a team of researchers entered the forest to collect seeds from 100 surviving sugar pine trees. Alongside other parched sugar pines etched with the tell-tale tunnel marks of bark beetles, were green, healthy trees. The researchers spent the past two years raising 10,000 seedlings from 100 surviving mother trees around the Lake Tahoe Basin. They were first cultivated at the USDA Forest Service鈥檚 Placerville Nursery and then moved to the swag外流 Tahoe City Field Station.

This week, between 4,000 and 5,000 of the seedlings are being planted around Lake Tahoe鈥檚 North Shore as part of a restoration project funded by the Tahoe Fund and the California Tahoe Conservancy. About 1,500 will be used to study and identify important adaptive traits, and the remainder will be given to private landowners to plant.

scientists and conservationists plant seedlings in forest
swag外流 scientists and California Conservation Corps members prepare to plant sugar pine seedlings in Tahoe National Forest, November 6, 2019. (Kat Kerlin, swag外流)

Survivors matter

If the seedlings turn out to be as genetically resilient as Maloney thinks and hopes they will be, these trees could represent the future forest, one better able to withstand the threats of climate change, including more droughts and bark beetle outbreaks.

鈥淭hese survivors matter,鈥 said Maloney, a scientist in the swag外流 Department of Plant Pathology and Tahoe Environmental Research Center. 鈥淓ssentially, these are the offspring of drought survivors. This is hopefully the genetic stock of the future.鈥

sugar pine seedling
The mother tree of this sugar pine seedling withstood years of drought and bark beetle outbreaks, suggesting resiliency to such threats. Scientists hope that resiliency was passed along to the seedlings. (Kat Kerlin, swag外流) 

Maloney is working with a crew from the California Conservation Corps to plant the seedlings around the Tahoe Basin in micro-climates and habitats conducive to their growth and survival, just in time for the coming rain and snow season. After all, they will no longer be hand watered by attentive scientists in a nursery.

鈥淭his project not only fosters restorative growth in California鈥檚 forests, it also plants seeds of forestry awareness and experience in our Corpsmembers that can lead them to careers in forest conservation,鈥 said Bruce Saito, director of the California Conservation Corps.

Planting genetic diversity

While the project is bringing more trees to the forest, it also aims to promote more genetic diversity within the trees.

Sugar pine trees with their giant, foot-long cones, once covered a quarter of Lake Tahoe鈥檚 forests. Comstock Era logging removed all but 5 percent of them, removing a significant share of their genetic diversity at the same time, . Over the years, white pine blister rust and bark beetles have impacted those that remain. By restoring native sugar pines鈥 genetic diversity, Maloney thinks the overall forest will benefit.

It鈥檚 a small-scale start, but Maloney is excited to track each mother tree to see how it survives.

鈥淔orest tree species have a large capacity for gene flow; they can move long distances,鈥 Maloney said. 鈥淥ur native tree species have the potential to change.鈥

Media Resources

Patricia Maloney, swag外流 Tahoe Environmental Research Center, 775-881-7569, pemaloney@ucdavis.edu

Kat Kerlin, swag外流 News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu

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Environment Food & Agriculture

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