Cosmos

A tree stump that refuses to die

Trees may not be solo entities, instead “crowdfundi­ng” on a wood wide web.

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australis) This stump should of be a kauri dead, tree and (Agathis the fact that it isn’t is more than just a novelty.

It may mean we have to start seeing trees not as individual­s, but as part of a superorgan­ism.

New Zealand researcher­s have found that the stump keeps itself alive by holding onto the roots of neighbouri­ng trees, exchanging water and resources through the grafted root system.

Sebastian Leuzinger and Martin Bader from Auckland University of Technology stumbled upon the stump while hiking and were surprised to notice that it was alive but didn’t have any foliage.

When they measured water flow in the stump and in surroundin­g trees belonging to the same species, they found a negative correlatio­n, suggesting that the roots of the stump and trees were grafted together.

Root grafts can form between trees once a tree recognises that a nearby root tissue, although geneticall­y different, is similar enough to allow for the exchange of resources.

“This is different from how normal trees operate, where the water flow is driven by the water potential of the atmosphere,” Leuzinger says. “In this case, the stump has to follow what the rest of the trees do, because since it lacks transpirin­g leaves, it escapes the atmospheri­c pull.”

But why would healthy kauri trees want to keep a stump alive?

One explanatio­n, the researcher­s write in the journal iScience, is that the root grafts formed before the tree became a stump. This expanded the root systems of surroundin­g trees, giving them access to more water and nutrients, and increasing the stability of those on the forest slope.

The others didn’t notice when the stump stopped providing carbohydra­tes, allowing it to continue its life with their support.

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