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The Woman Who Looked at a Forest and Saw a Community

The Woman Who Looked at a Forest and Saw a Community In her new book, Suzanne Simard contends that at the center of a healthy forest stands a Mother Tree: an old-growth matriarch that acts as a hub of nutrients shared by trees of different ages and species linked together via a vast underground fungal network.Credit.Clayton Cotterell for The New York Times Buy Book ▾ By Jonathan C. Slaght FINDING THE MOTHER TREE By Suzanne Simard In 1980, a 20-year-old silviculturalist hunched over a sickly young spruce planted in a clear-cut forest. She wondered why this particular seedling was dying, but nearby ones were not. To answer this question and all the other ones that stemmed from it, Suzanne Simard has spent decades with her hands in the soil, designing experiments and piecing together the remarkable mysteries of forest ecology.

Suzanne Simard: Finding the Mother Tree

The world’s leading forest ecologist launches her new book about the interconnected lives of trees. This is an online event hosted by Unique Media. Bookers will be sent a link in advance giving access and will be able to watch at any time for 48 hours after the start time. World-renowned scientist Suzanne Simard has spent a lifetime uncovering the secrets of trees. A true trailblazer, her findings on tree sentience, communication and memory were originally ridiculed by the scientific community. Today her discovery of the way trees communicate, through a sprawling underground network of fungi, shows the hidden intelligence of the forest. Her remarkable journey from woodland worker to international authority on ecology all started in the forests of British Columbia, where her family has lived for generations.

Small island off B C coast returned to local First Nation

Small island off B.C. coast returned to local First Nation SISȻENEM, also known as Halibut Island, is a 9.67-acre island near Sidney Island. The Land Conservancy of B.C. recently purchased it for $1.55 million.  Social Sharing CBC News · Posted: Mar 06, 2021 4:04 PM PT | Last Updated: March 7 SISȻENEM, also known as Halibut Island, is a 9.67-acre island off the east coast of Sidney Island near Victoria. (Land Conservancy of B.C.) The Land Conservancy of British Columbia and the W̱SÁNEĆ leadership council have partnered to transfer a small parcel of land near Vancouver Island back to its original inhabitants. 

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