Tree Cover

National Perspective on the Runaway Callery Pear – New York State Urban Forestry Council

Pyrus, We Have a Problem: National Perspective on the Runaway Callery Pear – New York State Urban Forestry Council

I moved from Rochester to the Hudson Valley in 2010. In the eight years since, I’ve noticed a steady proliferation of escaped Callery pears in the Valley. From one undeveloped bowl of land at a busy corner in my town emerges a cloud of white in the spring and some admittedly striking fall color come late October/early November. The problem is that not much else is growing there now, and many of these volunteer trees have reverted to thorniness, creating giant impenetrable thickets.

Callery pears have a mixed rating on wildlife value; on the one hand, bees and other insects visit the flowers in spring and a few species of songbirds eat the fruit after it softens in the winter. On the other hand, Callery pears do not support caterpillars in any significant numbers, so they do not provide adequate food for baby birds the way that oaks and other native trees do. From University of Delaware Professor Doug Tallamy, Author of Bringing Nature Home

From University of Delaware Professor Doug Tallamy, Author of Bringing Nature Home

Why are self-sterile cultivars of Callery pear producing fruit? One way it happens is when fertile pear understock sprouts, flowers, and produces viable pollen. Another: by the late 1990s, the introduction of new Callery pear cultivars beyond ‘Bradford’, cultivars like ‘Aristocrat’ and ‘Chanticleer’, led to an unexpected dilemma: in areas where large numbers of Callery pears were planted, the self-sterile cultivars starting pollinating one another. Then came the fruit, then came bird dispersion of the fruit … and “Pyrus, We Have a Problem.”

The Social Lives Of Trees

The Social Lives Of Trees

5/4/21 by NPR

Episode: https://play.podtrac.com/npr-381444908/edge1.pod.npr.org/anon.npr-mp3/npr/fa/2021/05/20210504_fa_fapodtuesd_1.mp3?awCollectionId=381444908&awEpisodeId=991986724&orgId=1&d=2851&p=381444908&story=991986724&t=podcast&e=991986724&size=45617407&ft=pod&f=381444908

Ecologist Suzanne Simard says trees are “social creatures” that communicate with each other in remarkable ways β€” including warning each other of danger and sharing nutrients at critical times. Her book is ‘Finding the Mother Tree.’

The wonder material we all need but is running out – BBC Future

The wonder material we all need but is running out – BBC Future

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Natural rubber is a uniquely tough, flexible and highly waterproof material. It puts tyres on our vehicles, soles on our shoes, it makes seals for engines and refrigerators, insulates wires and other electrical components. It is used in condoms and clothing, sports balls and the humble elastic bands. Over the past year it has played a pivotal role in the pandemic in personal protective equipment worn by doctors and nurses around the world.

In fact, rubber is deemed to be a commodity of such global importance that it is included on the EU's list of critical raw materials.

Unfortunately, there are signs the world might be running out of natural rubber. Disease, climate change and plunging global prices have put the world's rubber supplies into jeopardy. It has led scientists to search for a solution before it's too late.