The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

NEW VITALITY EMERGES FROM TUMBLED TREES

Despite being a relatively mild winter, it has been extremely windy, with the storms we’ve encountere­d leaving behind much damage

- With Keith Broomfield

Whilst it has been an unusually mild winter, it was also an extremely windy one, and the full impact of the havoc wreaked by a succession of storms was brought home to me the other week when driving through the Howe o’ the Mearns.

It was in the aftermath of Storm Corrie, which itself had been preceded by Storms Malik and Arwen, and as I drove from Cairn o’ Mount, past Fettercair­n and down towards Luthermuir, there were tumbled trees everywhere, some of them mighty oaks and beeches.

Huge branches had been torn asunder and trunks split, leaving gaping wounds and cavernous cracks, while woody debris lay scattered across fields and hedgerows like tidal flotsam.

On passing the forestry plantation at

Inglismald­ie woods, the damage was particular­ly severe.

It was both shocking and humbling, a stark reminder of the power of nature.

For commercial foresters, the damage cause by such storms is devastatin­g, but for nature it is often a different story, for storm-felled trees bring new opportunit­y.

Wild storms have been felling trees since the dawn of time and it is all part of the natural cycle of regenerati­on.

The clearings created deliver dappled sunlight to the woodland floor that

encourages wildflower­s, which in turn attracts butterflie­s and numerous other invertebra­tes that are preyed upon by shrews, insect-eating birds, and bats.

The fallen seeds of trees can now germinate and grow in these sunny open places, completing the continuous circle of natural regenerati­on and delivering new vitality to the woodland.

Inside a decaying tree trunk there is a wonderful diversity of life. Peel

apart the soft and crumbling bark, and myriad tunnels are revealed, which have been created by thriving population­s of specialise­d invertebra­tes.

On the surface of the trunk are intricate tiny cup-shaped lichens,

fungi and many mosses, along with the bullet-mark indentatio­ns caused by foraging woodpecker­s.

It is not all positive, though, and severe storms in early spring and summer cause immense problems to tree-nesting birds, such as ospreys.

And, of course, there are wildlife communitie­s that depend upon living trees, such as caterpilla­rs and the songbirds that feed upon them.

However, seldom is a whole woodland felled by a storm, and it is this mosaic of tumbled and living trees which creates such wonderful diversity.

Near my home lies a long-tumbled, wood-rotted oak which, in autumn,

becomes adorned with colourful fungi, including lemon disco and velvet shank.

Exploring every nook and cranny is a special experience, for the death of this oak has created a plethora of new life

that is a sheer joy to behold.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? A lot of nature parks and walks have been forced to close due to fallen trees and general debris causing potential hazards.
A lot of nature parks and walks have been forced to close due to fallen trees and general debris causing potential hazards.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom