Friday, April 24, 2009

A MOMENT OF RESPECT for The Lost Forests of America


As deforestation leveled native trees, so too have infestations of disease and insects decimated forests.

Posted April 23, 2009 By Charles Q. Choi, LiveScience

You could plant any old tree to celebrate Arbor Day April 24. But consider instead a sugar maple, or another of the native trees that once abounded in this country.

The forests that once dominated this nation were full of trees such as chestnuts, hemlocks and white pines on the East Coast and conifers such as redwoods and Douglas firs on the West Coast.

Around the arrival of Columbus, "it's said that squirrels could travel from tree to tree from the Northeast to the Mississippi without ever having to touch the ground," said Chris Roddick, chief arborist at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden in New York. "In the old growth forests in the Northeast, you had hemlock that were six or seven feet in diameter, chestnut trees 200 feet tall."

ARTICLE CONTINUES AT US NEWS AND WORLD REPORT

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