I had the great opportunity to visit the
The Andrews 
 Forest Pacific Northwest  didn’t
grow as crops. The trees here grew to be large and old. But what about these old-growth
forests? They were considered very inefficient, in fact worse than inefficient,
producing no new logs. First they needed to be cut down. Then efficient tree
farming could begin. The process was: 
Plant new trees, usually Douglas fir, grow them for 60 years, harvest
them by clear cutting, repeat. This was the new “scientific” approach to
forestry, which at least replaced the devastating cut and run forestry that
removed forests all across the country, starting at the East Coast. Still, this
new approach to forestry was focused on maximizing timber production. 
| Lookout Creek in the Andrews Forest | 
However, the researchers at the Andrews  Forest Andrews 
 Forest 
| Ancient Douglas firs in the Andrews Forest | 
Jon Luoma’s wonderful book, The Hidden Forest, tells the story of the research at the Andrews  Forest 
All plants need nitrogen to thrive. A young forest gets
nitrogen from nitrogen fixing shrubs. Red alder trees, which often are the
first trees to grow in a new forest also have nitrogen fixing bacteria in their
roots. However, as a forest matures, conifers grow to shade out the shrubs and
even the alders. By the time the forest becomes mature, all these nitrogen
fixers are gone. So, where does a mature forest get the nitrogen it needs? This
mystified scientists for a long time. They didn’t find the answer until a team
at the Andrews  Forest 
Lichens themselves are an interesting study in symbiosis. A
lichen is not a single organism. It is a composite organism made of algae and
fungi living in a symbiotic relationship. The algae perform photosynthesis and
supply energy to the lichen. Threads of fungi provide structure keeping it all
together, gather water and nutrients, and attach to the tree where the lichen
grows. 
Another fascinating discovery was finding fungi living
inside apparently healthy conifer needles. Why didn’t the fungi harm the
needles, and just what were the fungi doing there? Well, trees have a problem
with defoliating insects. Unlike short-lived plants, trees live too long to
react to evolving short-lived insects. It turns out that these fungi have a
symbiotic relationship with the needles. In exchange for the energy supplied by
the needles, the fungi protect the needles by creating compounds that poison
the defoliators. If the defoliators develop a resistance to the poison, the
short-lived fungi can quickly change to create new, effective poisons. It’s a
constant evolutionary race, not unlike the race between new strains of disease
and the pharmaceutical companies that must create new forms of antibiotics,
although the fungi don’t make billions of dollars for their services.
Over 100 years ago, scientists discovered another symbiotic
relationship 200 feet below in the root systems of the trees. While researching
how to grow truffles, a scientist discovered that threadlike tendrils attached
to the truffles were connected to the roots of trees and other plants. These
are the fungi that produce the truffles. He also discovered that seedlings with
these fungal connections grew much faster. Now we know that these fungi get
nourishment from the tree. In return, the fungi collect water and minerals that
feed the root system of the tree. 
|  | 
| Douglas squirrel munching on a fungus | 
In the 1970’s scientists at the Andrews  Forest Andrews 
 Forest 
These and other discoveries at the Andrews  Forest 
| Andrews rain gauge with baffles to increase accuracy | 
| My rain gauge | 
The two-day workshop I attended at the Andrews 
Forest  was hosted by the Oregon Season
Tracker Program, a joint project of the OSU Extension program and the Andrews  Forest 
Plant phenology observations
enable us to track the changes in plants as they respond to seasonal changes
and variations in weather and, in particular, climate change. We report our phenology observations on the Nature's Notebook site.
| Stream monitoring station | 
| Western hemlocks | 
| Temperature monitor | 
| Experimental rain gauges | 
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