‘The forest is not gone’: California’s ancient
redwoods survive wildfires
Fears rose that many trees, some 2,000 years old and
the tallest living things on Earth, may finally have succumbed to the fires
Associated
Press
Tue 25 Aug
2020 17.23 BSTLast modified on Tue 25 Aug 2020 17.37 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/25/redwoods-california-fires-trees-survival
When a
massive wildfire swept through California’s oldest state park last week it was
feared many trees in a grove of old-growth redwoods, some of them 2,000 years
old and among the tallest living things on Earth, may finally have succumbed.
But an
Associated Press reporter and photographer hiked the renowned Redwood Trail at
Big Basin Redwoods state park on Monday and confirmed most of the ancient
redwoods had withstood the blaze. Among the survivors is one dubbed Mother of
the Forest.
“That is
such good news, I can’t tell you how much that gives me peace of mind,” said
Laura McLendon, conservation director for the Sempervirens Fund, an
environmental group dedicated to the protection of redwoods and their habitats.
Redwood
forests are meant to burn, she said, so reports earlier this week that the
state park was “gone” were misleading.
The
historic park headquarters is gone, as are many small buildings and campground
infrastructure that went up in flames as fire swept through the park about 45
miles (72km) south of San Francisco.
“But the
forest is not gone,” McLendon said. “It will regrow. Every old growth redwood
I’ve ever seen, in Big Basin and other parks, has fire scars on them. They’ve
been through multiple fires, possibly worse than this.”
When forest
fires, windstorms and lightning hit redwood trees, those that don’t topple can
resprout. Mother of the Forest, for example, used to be 329ft tall (100
meters), the tallest tree in the park. After the top broke off in a storm, a
new trunk sprouted where the old growth had been.
Trees that
fall feed the forest floor, and become nurse trees from which new redwoods
grow. Forest critters, from banana slugs to insects, thrive under logs.
On Monday,
Steller’s jays searched for insects around the park’s partially burned outdoor
amphitheater and woodpeckers could be heard hammering on trees. Occasionally a
thundering crash echoed through the valley as large branches or burning trees
fell.
When Big
Basin opened in 1902 it marked the genesis of redwood conservation. The park
now receives about 250,000 visitors a year from around the world, and millions
have walked the Redwood Trail.
The park
only recently reopened after Covid-19-related closures and now is closed
because of the fire. The road in is blocked by several large trees that fell
across it, some waist-high, some still on fire.
While there
is a great deal of work to be done rebuilding campgrounds, clearing trails and
managing damaged madrones, oaks and firs, Big Basin will recover, McLendon
said.
“The
forest, in some ways, is resetting,” she said.
The state
parks district superintendent, Chris Spohrer, said he was pleased to know the
redwoods had survived. He said an assessment team had only been able to check
buildings so far, and that he hopes they can inspect the trees in the coming
days.
“The reason
those trees are so old is because they are really resilient,” he said.
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