SUBSCRIPTION    SUBMIT RELEASES    ADVERTISE    ARCHIVES    CONTACT                                 
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Bookmark and Share
Chestnuts Survive First Year in Woods
ASHEVILLE, North Carolina -- Recent plantings of the nearly extinct American chestnut tree-a beloved and once key species in the eastern U.S.-have thrived during their first growing season in national forests, according to The American Chestnut Foundation (TACF) who grew the blight-resistant seedlings.

This milestone, jointly achieved by TACF, the U.S. Forest Service, and the University of Tennessee, involved the test planting in 2008 of hundreds of blight-resistant American chestnut trees in three national forests in North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. In an effort to protect the seedlings, project partners are not disclosing the exact locations of the test plots.

"The American chestnut is important because it was once an integral part of the Appalachian culture providing food for wildlife and contributing to the diversity of the forest ecosystem," said Bryan Burhans, president and CEO of TACF. "The successful plantings we are announcing today are another step in the effort to re-introduce this keystone species back into its native range."

Once a dominant species, the American chestnut was virtually wiped out by an exotic fungus from Asia called the chestnut blight. During the last 26 years, The American Chestnut Foundation worked with partners to develop a blight-resistant American chestnut. Traditional backcross-breeding with the blight resistant Chinese chestnut produced a blight-resistant American chestnut that is 15/16th pure.

"Our partners at the U.S. Forest Service and University of Tennessee are monitoring blight resistance, growth and survival of the seedlings to determine whether the chestnut trees will survive and thrive in a real world setting," said Burhans. "This is all part of a larger landscape level effort to restore this keystone species to its native range."

The trees, now 4-6 feet tall and flowering, are doing well after only one year. These plantings are small, but represent the first scientific experiment using blight-resistant trees from the Foundation planted on Forest Service land. The results can be used to predict how blight-resistant American chestnuts will grow when restoration efforts become larger.

In 2010, 500 more blight-resistant chestnuts will be planted on national forests in the South.

Detailed information about the test plantings and future aspirations for a large-scale restoration of the American chestnut species can be found at www.fs.fed.us/r8/chestnut. The website also features photos of recent tree growth, video of the monitoring process and historic information about the American chestnut.
Contact:
Meghan Jordan,The American Chestnut Foundation (828) 713-9547

THE OUTDOOR WIRE DIGITAL NETWORK > FISHING WIRE : SHOOTING WIRE : TACTICAL WIRE : DEALER WIRE : WOMEN'S OUTDOOR WIRE
© Copyright 2010 The Outdoor Wire. All Rights Reserved.