Breeding program aims to restore a classic American tree
Transcription
Breeding program aims to restore a classic American tree
Breeding program aims to restore a classic American tree - By ... http://knox.villagesoup.com/p/breeding-program-aims-to-restore... Not Active (Status: Published, May 30, 2013 07:56 - Jun 13, 2013 10:56) Growing disease-resistant American chestnuts in Hope Breeding program aims to restore a classic American tree By Sarah E. Reynolds | May 30, 2013 Share Share Share Share More 12 Photo by: Sarah E. Reynolds Mary Bok, right, talks with Eric Evans, vice president and breeding coordinator of The American Chestnut Foundation's Maine Chapter. They are standing in a chestnut orchard planted on Bok's land in Hope. Hope chestnut orchards HOPE — Talk to Eric Evans of Camden and he's likely to tell you a long story — one that began a century ago. Evans is the vice president and breeding coordinator of The American Chestnut Foundation's (TACF) Maine Chapter. As such, he is deeply involved in TACF's six-generation back-cross breeding program to produce American chestnut trees able to resist the chestnut blight fungus that decimated the tree a hundred years ago. Before the blight, Evans said, the American chestnut was “the single most important tree species” in the eastern United States, affording excellent lumber and abundant food for animals – food that has not completely been replaced by other nut trees. The restoration effort is a work of decades and involves a complex process of repeated cross-breeding, testing trees by inoculating them with live, laboratory-grown fungus, culling trees and 1 of 3 7/18/13 10:22 AM Breeding program aims to restore a classic American tree - By ... View More... http://knox.villagesoup.com/p/breeding-program-aims-to-restore... planting nuts from the hardiest trees with the most desirable characteristics. The Maine Chapter's website describes the program: “Our Maine Chapter of TACF is one of about a dozen state chapters conducting a back-cross breeding program coordinated by TACF’s research farms in Meadowview, Va., using local American chestnuts as the mother trees to ensure that blight-resistant trees coming out of our breeding will be most ideally adapted to our Maine growing conditions. We have back-cross breeding and seed orchards in 14 towns from Lovell to Bradley.” Three of the back-cross orchards are in Hope, the most recent one on land owned by Mary Bok. The program asks land owners to care for the chestnut seedlings planted on their land and pays no fee for the use of the land. Nevertheless, Bok said she wanted to get involved with the program because, “I heard the story about the tree and its struggles to survive…I respect Eric [Evans] and his projects enormously.” About 240 1-year-old chestnut seedlings were planted on Bok's land in April. They will be injected with the lab-grown fungus after they start producing nuts, in about five years, Evans said. The trees will be culled, leaving only the best 10 specimens, he said, and for several years after that nuts will be collected from them to be planted in the seed orchards that will nourish the fifth generation in the six-generation program. Also in Hope is Harold Moser's farm, which contains another back-cross orchard, this one planted during several years, starting in 2006 and ending in 2012. Most of the trees on Moser's land are 6 to 8 years old, and the larger trees there will be inoculated with the fungus this June to test for blight resistance. The fungus made its way to the U.S. from Asia around the turn of the 20th century, and by 1950, “except for the shrubby root sprouts the species continually produces (and which also quickly become infected), the keystone species that had covered 188 million acres of eastern forests had disappeared,” according to the TACF's website. As Evans explained, the blight fungus, “is not generally a pathogen in Asia,” where it evolved along with the Chinese chestnut, a smaller, more rounded tree than its tall, straight-growing American cousin. Chinese chestnuts are more apt to be used for nut production, whereas the American trees were used for lumber, he said. Because of the Chinese chestnut's blight resistance, the first generation of the breeding program was simply a cross of American and Chinese trees. This took place at TACF's research farms in Virginia. The resulting trees have been back-crossed for three successive generations with American chestnuts native to the place where the disease-resistant descendants would eventually be planted. So, for example, the Maine Chapter received pollen from second back-cross trees in Virginia selected for their blight resistance, which was then used to manually pollinate native Maine American chestnuts in order to keep the Maine trees' adaptations for local conditions. Maine is on the northern edge of the American chestnut's growing range, Evans said, and tends to grow at lower elevations here than in southern New England or further south, because it doesn't like extreme cold. South of New England, he said, it grows in the mountains, where drainage is good. After the first generation of trees in the Maine program started producing nuts, those from trees selected for disease resistance and American characteristics were planted and allowed to pollinate each other. Through successive testing, culling and planting seeds from selected trees, American chestnuts with good disease resistance will be bred. Then TACF will trademark a name — probably “Restoration Chestnut,” Evans said — and seeds will be sold commercially. They likely will not be available to the public until 2025 or later, according to the Maine Chapter's website. 2 of 3 7/18/13 10:22 AM Breeding program aims to restore a classic American tree - By ... http://knox.villagesoup.com/p/breeding-program-aims-to-restore... In addition to land owners' donations of growing space and day-to-day maintenance, the project, which has no paid staff in Maine, depends on volunteer labor for planting trees and harvesting nuts, Evans said. Volunteers come from land trusts, the Small Woodlot Owners Association of Maine and conservation groups like the Nature Conservancy, as well as interested individuals. As breeding coordinator for the Maine program, Evans' volunteer work takes up a lot of his time, especially in the spring. He determines what happens when, oversees the Maine orchards and attends meetings at the TACF's research farm in Virginia. He offered a story from his childhood as a partial explanation for why he puts so much of his time into a project that may not be complete in his lifetime. As a youth in 1960, Evans went on a camping trip with his Boy Scout troop in the Blue Ridge mountains of Virginia, and saw many of the chestnut trees that had been destroyed by the blight. “It made quite an impression on me,” he said. 12 Comments (0) STAFF PROFILE Sarah E. Reynolds has been a reporter and writer for more than 20 years, winning awards from the Maine Press Association and other professional organizations. She loves to read, hike and play word games. Sarah Reynolds Sarah E. 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