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Ca. 'Ghosts of the Forest' studied

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Staff Writers
San Jose, Calif. (UPI) Dec 3, 2010
California researchers say they are struggling to unravel the mystery of the "ghosts of the forest," rare albino saplings in the state's coastal redwood groves.

The world's only white evergreens, the rare genetic mutants appear and disappear seasonally, the San Jose (Calif.) Mercury News reported.

Researchers at Stanford University and the University of California, Santa Cruz, are hoping to learn how such helpless trees can survive.

"It is a great puzzle," said Ghia Euskirchen, director of the DNA Sequencing Program at Stanford University School of Medicine.

Albinism is common in animals but it's very unusual in plants, because being green is central to a plant's existence since the plant pigment called chlorophyll is vital for photosynthesis. Without it, the trees have no way to manufacture the food needed for growth.

So the albino saplings of California can't live independently and remain sprouted on a parental trunk.

When conditions are bad, the parent tree withdraws all support and the seedlings perish, turning brown.

In times of abundant rain, they sprout again, flourishing.

"They come and go, like ghosts," Dave Kuty, docent at Cowell Park that has seven such trees, said. "They starve to death and shrink back. Then they reappear."

One redwood expert said it makes no sense.

"Almost everything that a redwood tree does is survival response," Cabrillo College historian Sandy Lydon, co-author of the book "Coastal Redwoods," said.

"The way they race for the sun. The way they regenerate. The way they respond if hit by lightning," he said. "Now here is something that has not a damn thing to do with any of that."

"I'm hoping that science can give us a clue," he said.



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WOOD PILE
American west's forests face troubling carbon trend
Washington (AFP) Dec 3, 2010
Crippled by drought, scorched by wildfires and dying from beetle infestations, forests in the American west are struggling and in some states they now exude more carbon than they absorb, experts say. In an attempt to uncover what the future holds for these ancient pine forests, scientists are studying how trees recover and regrow, and what forest managers can do to help them respond to the m ... read more







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