Ed-
I think we had different visions of the populations that we were speaking of.
 
The removal of a single wolf tree from an ecosystem is as you say not likely to 
have an effect, genetically.
 
In the case of a western coniferous forest in a clearcut operation, the common 
industry practice used to be to remove all trees of commercial value and leave 
the rest for 'wildlife' trees or 'seed' trees, to meet the increasing 
constraints placed on timber sales.  Talk about counter-productive!
The removal of 'populations' and the retaining of wolf and seed trees does 
affect the genetics of subsequent forests (non-coppice reproducing species).
I have unrealilstically posed 'wolf' trees, 'seed' trees as examples, although 
it was once common.
The USFS program collecting cones of genetically superior trees, for seed 
collection and reforestation is well-founded and has been viable for at least a 
half century that I'm familiar with personally, albeit for a wider array of 
genetic traits.
 
But to get back to Beth, Neil and Ryan, I think their most interesting point, 
was that it was clear from the chinkapin oak population discovered, that age 
and dbh predictably didn't have a good correlation. Having spent part of 
October visiting ancient foxtail and bristlecone pine forests (2K and 4K max 
ages, respectively) in Eastern California, it's clear that oldest of old-growth 
trees don't always have predictable relationships with height/dbh/crown spread 
superlatives. The ability of these trees to continue living with a mere 
fraction of their phloem/cambium periphery intact, is amazing...as are the 
misshapen chinkapin oaks in KY's 'Inner Bluegrass Region'.  
-Don
 
 
 
 



From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [ENTS] Re: old trees in the Inner 
Bluegrass Region of KentuckyDate: Mon, 17 Nov 2008 17:21:51 -0500


Don,
 
By genetic selection you can only constrain things that are genetically 
controlled.    If a certain developmental form is the result of environmental 
factors rather than genetic control, a phenotype, rather than a genotype, then 
two widely different looking specimens may have the same essential genetic 
make-up.  Therefore eliminating trees that have a particular form resulting 
from environmental factors will not affect the genetic make-up of the species 
at all.  I don't know and really doubt there is any difference in the genetics 
of between a fat old wolfy hemlock and tall columnar hemlocks in the same 
general setting.   So removing the tall columnar trees will not affect the 
frequency of multiple tops or lateral branching expressed in the trees if they 
are subject to the conditions favoring multiple tops, nor will it mean that the 
trees grown from the multi-top trees will show any more tendency to form 
multiple tops than columnar tree if the condition for producing columnar trees 
is present.
 
In a general population there are really only two main factors that result in 
genetic differentiation.  So long as the tree can easily cross-pollinate or 
interbreed the genetic make-up of the population tends to be pretty uniform.  A 
large distance say from one end of a species range to the other may result in 
genetic drift.  The species at one end of the range may express different 
physical characteristics than those trees at the far end of the range because 
trees at the opposite ends of the range do not freely interbreed because of the 
distance.  Whether this is because of a genetic difference or not is another 
question.  Some genes are expressed because of environmental triggers and may 
be expressed differently in different areas.  Other genetic traits, similar to 
blue eyed vs brown eyed traits in humans, may occur in different frequencies at 
different ends of the range.  Some traits may be missing completely when 
comparing one end of the range to the other.  But within the same general area 
where interbreeding can control in a contiguous population, the genetic make-up 
is for practical purposes uniform, even if the trees express different 
phenotypes.  
 
The other places where genetic variations occur are in disjunct populations and 
in populations in extreme environments.  In these areas less frequently 
occurring genetic trait may be concentrated, while others are eliminated 
completely.  Isolation from the general population allows any favorable 
mutation of genetic make-up to spread more quickly that is possible among the 
general population with a larger genetic pool. All species tend to show some 
genetic change through time, but he change is most rapid in isolated 
populations.  If you look at the evolution of species over time, what you see 
may not be the slow change over time you expect, but a more rapid change.  An 
isolated population develops a different genetic profile more quickly.  Then if 
it is merged again with the general population through the natural ebb and flow 
of population boundaries with climate change, this change if advantageous may 
spread quickly through the general population, may spread and coexist as a 
separate entity across the range of the original population, or even replace 
the members of the original parent population with the new variety. 
 
To focus the point once more, I don't think there is any real genetic 
difference among the population of wolf trees and the population of columnar 
trees in a given locality, so eliminating one form will not change the genetic 
makeup of the population in general.  Do I think some trees are genetically 
superior to others?  Of course, individual trees may have different genetic 
compositions and some are "superior" to others.  That is why efforts to save 
the biggest and best hemlock trees are worthwhile, because INDIVIDUALS may have 
superior genetic characteristics.  Looking at a population scale, the 
populations in an area tends to be pretty uniform in genetic make-up.  The 
population contains genes representing all the genetic variability available.
 
Ed
 
 
 
"Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both. 
"Robert Frost (1874–1963). Mountain Interval. 1920. 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: DON BERTOLETTE 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2008 3:12 PM
Subject: [ENTS] Re: old trees in the Inner Bluegrass Region of Kentucky
Ed-I of course realize that you were constraining you comments to those species 
that rely on coppice reproduction. Leaving fat old 'wolfy' hemlocks, while 
taking tall columnar hemlocks, for example, is likely to retain genes that 
favor multiple tops, and lateral branching preference.  Both phenotypes are 
needed for the diversity that favors survival, but the latter is sought after 
by the logger/mill interests.-DonRB

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [ENTS] Re: old trees in the Inner 
Bluegrass Region of KentuckyDate: Mon, 17 Nov 2008 11:57:05 -0500


ENTS
 
It is hard to lose genetic diversity in a species short of eliminating the 
entire population except for a handful of specimens or by selectively 
eliminating a specific genetic characteristic.  Timbering is basically a 
non-selective process.  The trees that sprout up after logging have pretty much 
the same genetic characteristics as the original population.  They just don't 
have the same environment in which to grow.  Trees or species that are adapted 
to extreme environments are the most vulnerable to genetic loss.  These are 
populations that tend to concentrate genetic characteristics that are uncommon 
in the overall population and tend to preserve any advantageous mutations that 
would be lost among the larger genetic pool of the general population.  The 
characteristics that are concentrated are still present in the general 
population and given enough time they could be potentially be concentrated 
again in an isolated  population trying to adapt to the same extreme 
environment.  Any true genetic variations limited to the isolated or extreme 
environment population would be lost with the effective elimination of the host 
population.  Again simple cutting is non-selective, so it would require the 
population be removed and conditions altered so that the locality is not 
repopulated by the sprouts or offspring of the timbered or otherwise removed 
species.
 
Ed
 
 
 
"Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, And sorry I could not travel both. 
"Robert Frost (1874–1963). Mountain Interval. 1920. 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Ryan McEwan 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2008 9:54 AM
Subject: [ENTS] Re: old trees in the Inner Bluegrass Region of Kentucky
  
All: 

I would like to second Neil's main point- these trees may have passed through a 
bit of a genetic bottleneck due to human activities...but my gut tells me that 
we have only begun to discover the genetic flexibility trees.  Plus, these 
trees were growing right on rocks, on a palisade, I would not infer much from 
their form.  I bet you could grow "ideal" trees from one of their acorns.  

Than, again, if we think their form is a little off from the ideal, I think 
maybe that is an indication of our (non-biologically supportable) bias, not any 
real evaluation of the inferiority of the tree!!!  This whole rat-race we are 
all involved in is ultimately about evolutionary fitness, and these trees have 
had about 200 extra years of acorn crops, so I reckon they are in much better 
shape than their fancy, straight-trunked, cousins who met the saw long-ago!! 

ryan 
 
 
 
-- Ryan McEwanThe University of Daytonhttp://udbiology.com/content.php?id=1664
 
On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 7:27 AM, neil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
 Beth, That is great - I love the look of chinquapin oak [or chinkapin,however 
you wish to spell it. I'd be careful on estimating tree agefrom external 
characteristics. The last tree on the list was largerthan most trees cored & 
yet ~ 1/4 of the potential ages. It lives nextto a trail and an ephemeral 
stream. I'd guess it has less competitionand more moisture availability yr 
round VS the other trees. BTW funny timing ENTS'ers: Floracliff and two other 
KY forests,including the 2000+ acre old-growth Blanton Forest, are featured 
inthe book "Wildlands Philanthropy: The Great American Tradition". Anice 
article was written up in the local paper Saturday 
-http://www.kentucky.com/601/story/592954.html - w/ accompanying shortarticles 
on the three KY forests. neil


On Nov 16, 8:39 pm, Beth Koebel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> Neil,>  > Those 
ages are great!  I am glad that you sent photos also as I believe I have found 
my first chinquapin oaks at a park in Pacific, Missouri.   I now have to 
reevalute the age estimate for those trees. >  > I will send a seperate email 
about the park and Pacific, Missouri later as soon as I find the connector 
between my camera and my pc.>  > Beth>>  
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