Barry, 

Others may want to chime in here, but as the short answer to your question, 
Sillett, Van Pelt, et al. are doing large scale scientific research on these 
big trees to understand the physiology more completely. This includes figuring 
out the tree's internal plumbing, epiphytes it lives with, parasites on it, 
etc. We may dramatize a few interesting tree statistics in ENTS for comparative 
purposes, but they are PhD-level researchers who go very deeply into tree 
morphology. Will's posts to ENTS are spectacular, but are meant only to inform 
us of his participation in an extensive study. It is the mere tip of the 
iceberg in terms of information gathered for scientific purposes. 


The information gathered from these climbs is like no other and will help 
scientists to understand how these trees grow, cope with a changing 
environment, create ecological niches, etc. - a very long list. 


Bob 





----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Barry Caselli" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 7, 2009 5:35:05 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [ENTS] Re: Sequoia adventures 7/2-7/9/2009 - Day 3-5- TALLEST SEQUOIA! 


Awesome pictures of a beautiful tree, with an interesting report too. 
But what I'd like to know, what I've been wondering about, is why bother with 
all this mapping and modeling? 
Yeah I understand wanting to know the height of a tree, the diameter and 
circumference, and the crown spread, but why the rest, what you did here? 
What's the point in knowing? 
Maybe it's a dumb question, but I've finally decided to ask. 
Thanks 

--- On Wed, 10/7/09, Will Blozan <[email protected]> wrote: 



From: Will Blozan <[email protected]> 
Subject: [ENTS] Sequoia adventures 7/2-7/9/2009 - Day 3-5- TALLEST SEQUOIA! 





WNTS/ENTS, 



The time had come for the 3-D mapping and volume modeling of the World’s 
tallest known giant sequoia. Growing just over the ridge from Whitaker Forest , 
this tree had been rigged and tape-dropped but the entire mapping process- 
including foliar, twig and cone sub-sampling- had not yet been performed. Two 
mapping teams were assembled for this project which was expected to span a full 
three days. Steve Sillett and Marie Antoine were one team and Bob Van Pelt and 
I the other. At 94.8 meters (311’) this tree stands just centimeters taller 
than another tree in Redwood Canyon . 

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