. Earth Science News .
WOOD PILE
Era of canopy crane ending

The crane lifts researchers above trees as tall as 220 feet. The old-growth Douglas fir and western hemlock forest is typical of those that once covered much of the Cascades in western Washington and Oregon. Credit: University of Washington
by Staff Writers
Seattle WA (SPX) Apr 29, 2011
The 25-story construction crane used since 1995 to investigate such things as how Pacific Northwest forests absorb carbon dioxide, obtain sufficient water and resist attacks by pests and diseases is being pruned back to just the tower.

The Wind River Canopy Crane, located in a 500-year-old forest near Stevenson in southwest Washington, has been operated cooperatively by the University of Washington, the Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station and the Gifford Pinchot National Forest.

The partners say the jib - the arm of the crane - is being removed because the Forest Service faces budget shortfalls and replacement parts for the crane are becoming more difficult to obtain. Funding for the crane's operation has largely come from the station's budget. The jib will be removed when money is available, possibly this summer.

Gone will be the ability to carry a gondola with researchers and instruments from the bottom to the top of trees as tall as 220 feet in a 560-foot circle of old-growth forest. The Wind River crane has the farthest reach of any of the nine forest canopy research cranes operating in the world today.

Remaining will be the 230-foot tower with sensors that collect data about how the carbon dioxide is absorbed and released by the forest, work under way since 1999.

Because of the crane, the UW and the Forest Service have one of the world's longest, continuously collected data sets of carbon flux from a forest, according to Jerry Franklin, UW professor of forest resources, who was the prime mover in the 1990s for landing the $1 million project.

The carbon flux data are important as policymakers and citizens consider how to manage forests to maximize the amount of carbon they hold, he said.

Work at the crane site produced some of the first data to substantiate what Franklin and other scientists suspected in the 1980s: that old-growth Douglas fir forests weren't emitting more carbon than they were absorbing.

"Data collected at the crane site revealed that old growth forests are a sink for carbon," Franklin says.

A growing number of partners, ranging from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to the Smithsonian Institution Global Earth Observatories, count on carbon flux and isotope data being collected at the Wind River facility from the tower.

Recently the site was chosen as the Pacific Northwest core site for the National Ecological Observatory Network, known as NEON, a major new initiative of the National Science Foundation.

The crane has facilitated other significant scientific discoveries, Franklin says, including seminal research on the structure of forest canopies, physiology of northwestern tree species, carbon and water cycles in forests, forest productivity and health, and the contributions of forest canopies to biodiversity, including birds, bats and insects. Researchers and students using the crane have generated more than 250 scientific publications.

The crane has, for example, enabled Pacific Northwest Research Station ecologist Rick Meinzer to study how very tall trees get the water they need to survive centuries of environmental extremes.

During annual cycles of summer drought, trees rely on internal water storage to stabilize the supply of water to foliage high in the canopy, and on their deep roots to bring water close to the surface to feed shallow roots that might otherwise die every summer.

"Research using the crane has provided important insights about the factors that limit maximum tree height and why height growth slows drastically as a tree becomes taller," Meinzer says.

"The tower will continue to be part of the nationwide network for continuous camera observation of changes in the timing of events such as leaf emergence and senescence, which are being influenced by climate change. Camera images are updated continuously and are available to both scientists and the public through websites."

The tower site and experimental forest also will continue to provide educational opportunities for high-school and college students focused on forest ecology, population dynamics and functions such as the cycling of carbon, water and nutrients.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Crane homepage
NEON, National Ecological Observatory Network
Forestry News - Global and Local News, Science and Application



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


WOOD PILE
Developing biocontrols to contain a voracious pest
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 28, 2011
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists are playing a key role in efforts to contain the emerald ash borer's destructive march through the nation's forests. Researchers with USDA's Agricultural Research Service (ARS) are testing a fungal pathogen that could be used as a biocontrol, along with the release of non-stinging wasps that are the beetle's natural enemies. Wasps have been ... read more







WOOD PILE
Japan PM on defensive over disaster leadership

Dalai Lama tells Japan to look to future

Quake-hit Japan open for business: foreign minister

Second woman exposed to radiation at Japan plant

WOOD PILE
Thousands queue for iPad 2 across Asia

New polymer structures for use as plastic electronics

Chinese pay price for world's rare earths addiction

NIST nanomagnets offer food for thought about computer memories

WOOD PILE
Venice turns to floating barriers to ward off flood threats

U.S. land mass is shrinking

Miner Vale invests in mega dam

Eddies found to be powerful modes of ocean transport

WOOD PILE
Calling all candidates for Concordia

Melting ice on Arctic islands a major player in sea level rise

ESA-NASA Collaboration Furthers Sea-Ice Research

Melting ice on Arctic islands boosts sea levels: study

WOOD PILE
Scorpion venom bad for bugs but good for pesticides

China food scandals spark new safety fears

Stressed out crop impede higher agriculture yields

Lima to declare itself a GMO-free zone

WOOD PILE
Japan mulls tsunami lessons for reconstruction

Ecuador on alert after volcano erupts

Forecasters predict multiple US hurricane landfalls

Rain is Colombia's 'worst' natural disaster: Santos

WOOD PILE
Diehard pro-Gbagbo militia begin to disarm

Darfur rebels reject draft Doha accord

Nigeria holds final polls despite violence

Burkina Faso president assumes defence post

WOOD PILE
Chinese population ageing, moving to the cities

Evolution of human 'super-brain' tied to development of bipedalism, tool-making

Berlusconi, Sarkozy meet over migrants

Pope urges 'solidarity' with refugees from conflict


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement