Smarty Pants From The American Scholar

#184: Listening to the Trees

Informações:

Sinopsis

Suzanne Simard, an ecologist at the University of British Columbia’s Department of Forests and Conservation Sciences, has dedicated her life to mapping the relationships between trees: how they send nutrients to one another, remember the past, warn their neighbors of disease or drought, and support their offspring. Her new memoir, Finding the Mother Tree, tells how her work has unfolded from her first discoveries of mycorrhizal fungi in the “wood wide web” to the inheritance left behind by dying trees and the life-giving force of the largest elders. Simard used isotopes and mass spectrometers to quantify the Indigenous knowledge that inspired her to study the interconnectedness of forest communities—and our human ones. She joins us on the podcast to discuss what we might all learn from trees.Go beyond the episode:Suzanne Simard’s Finding the Mother TreeRead Miranda Weiss’s review from our Summer 2021 issue hereExplore the Mother Tree Project, an experiment on forest resilience in the face of climate chan