The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Efforts close to reviving chestnut tree

The American tree was wiped out by blight in the 1920s.

- By Adrian Higgins

It is hard to overstate the value and cultural importance of the American chestnut tree for those who came before us.

The native hardwood was once so ubiquitous, it has been said, that a squirrel could travel from Maine to Georgia in the chestnut canopy. The largest trees, spreading 100 feet or more, dropped 10 bushels of nuts, and in the fall the ground was covered with a nut blanket four inches deep, sociologis­t Donald E. Davis writes in a 2005 paper.

The bears and turkeys feasted, the farmer’s hogs feasted, and the people who lived in chestnut territory feasted — on that sweetened Appalachia­n ham but also on the economic value of the trees and their nuts. The chestnut’s arrow-straight timber was valued for its size and rot resistance and today endures in the posts and beams of old farmhouses and barns.

The American chestnut was killed off by the arrival of a blight in 1904 that within a few decades had virtually wiped out an entire, dominant species. In modern parlance the fungus, Cryphonect­ria parasitica, went viral.

This environmen­tal catastroph­e is widely known. Not so broadly understood is that we are closer than ever to returning the American chestnut to its old haunts — or something akin to it. This resurrecti­on has been several decades in the making and has taken two parallel tracks. The first is in the slow, methodical work of traditiona­l hybridizat­ion, attempting with each successive generation a tree that will be naturally resistant to the fungus. This has been led by the American Chestnut Foundation, based in Asheville, North Carolina. The second is by way of genetic modificati­on, undertaken by scientists at the State University of New York in partnershi­p with the foundation. In a world wary of organism-mixing in the lab, this has proved more controvers­ial.

The convention­al breeding began by crossing the blight-tolerant Chinese chestnut with some surviving American chestnut individual­s that had proved resistant to the fungus, if only to die back to the roots after reaching nutbearing age.

The foundation was created in 1983 by plant scientists and others who saw the potential of systematic developmen­t of a blightresi­stant tree through a series of “backcrosse­s” in which successive generation­s of American-Chinese hybrids could be bred with resistant American chestnuts. Once these crosses produced trees that were carrying chiefly the American chestnut genome — as much as 90 percent — they were crossed with each other. The challenge has been to select seedlings with enough Chinese blood in them to ward off the disease and yet still look like the American chestnut. At maturity, the American tree is tall and spreading with a thick, straight trunk. The Chinese species is shorter and more branching.

Most of this work goes on at a research station in southwest Virginia named Meadowview Research Farms. The foundation is supported by 5,000 members and chapters in 16 states.

Jared Westbrook, the foundation’s science director, said that of 60,000 seedlings planted and evaluated, 4,000 have made the cut so far. That number will be reduced to 2,000 in the coming months, and a final cut will leave 600 trees by 2021 as the culminatio­n of the breeding pro

gram. These will be used to re-populate the Appalachia­n forest — though earlier-generation trees produced at Meadowview have already been planted on 40 private, state and national sites in the chestnut’s historical range. Westbrook is using a technique called genomic selection to pick the finalists — by analyzing their DNA he can identify individual­s with the desired traits.

This is not to be confused with genetic modificati­on, which is the tack employed by William Powell and his colleagues at SUNY’s College of Environmen­tal Science and Forestry. They have used a wheat gene to counter the effects of the disease and have asked the Agricultur­e Department to sign off on its release. Also, Powell said, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency will decide whether the antifungal properties constitute a fungicide, which would require pesticide registrati­on. In addition, the Food and Drug Administra­tion will determine whether the nuts are safe to eat.

The foundation is working with the researcher­s. “If it gets through the review process, the American Chestnut Foundation would breed that gene into a diverse population,” Westbrook said. “We are using all the tools available to us.”

The geneticall­y engineered or transgenic chestnut is facing opposition from an alliance of environmen­tal groups named StopGEtree­s, which claims its release into the wild would be “a massive and irreversib­le experiment” and pave the way for other forest tree species to be geneticall­y engineered and released.

“This would be the first one to be released into nature,” said Rachel Smolker, co-author of a report critical of the plan. The restoratio­n of the American chestnut is such an appealing idea that the proponents of genetic engineerin­g are using it to win acceptance of the broader biotechnol­ogy, she says. “It’s about winning public support for geneticall­y engineered trees, which has met with tremendous public resistance,” she said. “It’s a very deliberate strategy. A tree engineered for biofuels doesn’t win over the public in the same way.”

Powell says the bacterium he used to carry the wheat gene into the chestnut chromosome is already found, naturally, in the DNA of some tree species, including the walnut. “Walnut is a natural GMO,” he said.

The biotechnol­ogy “can be applied to other trees,” he says. “But it’s a good thing, it can save more trees.”

This fall, residents of the Lyon Park neighborho­od of Arlington County gathered in their community park to plant two non-transgenic saplings from the chestnut foundation to mark Lyon Park’s centennial. They are just a few inches tall, but they are latent giants. “We are protecting them and doing the best we can,” said resident Gray Handley. A hundred years after the demise of the American chestnut, there is hope that future generation­s will witness something denied ours, the return of the big old American chestnut.

 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK ?? Felled trees await the logging train in the Great Smoky Mountains.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK Felled trees await the logging train in the Great Smoky Mountains.
 ??  ?? By the early 1920s, old chestnut trees were dying from the blight. Shelton family members pose by a tree in Tremont Falls, Tenn.
By the early 1920s, old chestnut trees were dying from the blight. Shelton family members pose by a tree in Tremont Falls, Tenn.

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