It's a relentlessly sunny day in the Rocky Mountains, and here at 9,000 feet, on the Grand Mesa in western Colorado, the aspen trees should be casting a shadow. But something is wrong in this stand: the treetops are nearly bare, their branches twisting starkly into the blue sky. Sarah Tharp, a wiry biologist for the U.S. Forest Service, hoists a small ax, takes aim and delivers an angled blow to an aspen trunk, peeling off a sample of diseased bark.
"Sometimes," she says, "I feel like a coroner."
Aspen, one of the few broad-leaved trees to grow at high altitude in Western mountains, are emblems of the Rockies. Their lean, chalky trunks are instantly recognizable on an alpine slope, their blazing-yellow fall displays part of the region's seasonal clockwork. The characteristic flutter of their heart-shaped leaves in the breeze gives them their nickname—"quakies"—and fills their stands with an unmistakable shhhhh.
In 2004, foresters noticed that aspen in western Colorado were falling silent. While the trees have always been susceptible to disease and insect attacks, especially in old age, "this was totally different from anything we'd seen before," says forester Wayne Shepperd. "In the past, you'd maybe see rapid die-off of one stand out of an entire landscape—it wasn't really a big deal. But now, we're seeing whole portions of the landscape go."
By 2006, close to 150,000 acres of Colorado aspen were dead or damaged, according to aerial surveys. By the following year, the grim phenomenon had a name—"sudden aspen decline," or SAD—and the devastated acreage had more than doubled, with some 13 percent of the state's aspen showing declines. In many places, patches of bare and dying treetops are as noticeable as missing teeth, and some sickly areas stretch for miles. Aspen declines are also underway in Wyoming, Utah and elsewhere in the Rockies. Surveys of two national forests in Arizona showed that from 2000 to 2007, lower-elevation areas lost 90 percent of their aspen.
Aspen grow in "clones," or groups of genetically identical trunks. Some clones are thousands of years old, although individual trees live 150 years at most. One especially large stand in Utah, known as "Pando" after the Latin for "I spread," was recently confirmed by geneticists to cover 108 acres. It is variously said to be the world's heaviest, largest or oldest organism. Disturbances such as wildfires or disease usually prompt clones to send up a slew of fresh sprouts, but new growth is rare in SAD-affected stands.
Tharp and three other young Forest Service biologists—under the genial supervision of veteran plant pathologist Jim Worrall—are chasing down the causes of the decline. They walk among the aspen trunks and divvy up their tasks for the day.
"You want me to dig? Is that where this is heading?" Worrall teases the crew members, who are outfitted in hard hats and orange vests and sport the occasional nose piercing.
A tiny mark on the bark of one trunk prompts Angel Watkins to probe underneath with a knife, where she finds the wood is decorated by the convoluted track of a bronze poplar borer larva. While the inch-long larvae don't usually kill aspen outright, their trails can weaken the trees and open new portals to fungal infections, which in turn form oozing bruises under the bark. On another tree, Worrall finds small cracks like those on the surface of a cookie, a clue that tunneling underneath has dried out the bark. Closer inspection turns up a bark beetle, no more than one-twelfth-inch long but capable, en masse, of cutting off the tree's nutrient supply.
I am grateful to see this story in the Smithsonian; SAD has received too little attention. Aspens are an iconic species, the largest life form known, and that their success arises out of a strategic response to ecological disruption suggest we humans might do well to pay attention.
I have written of this extensively on my blog under a collection of thought I call Aspen-Body Wisdom. Forbidden Knowledge and the Aspen-Body is one sample: http://wildresiliencyblog.wordpress.com/2007/10/20/forbidden-knowledge-and-the-aspen-body/
Also, at least one aspen ramet has been dated at 300 years. See the bottom of this page for a photo and info:
http://www.usu.edu/saf/h062802.html
Thanks again for the coverage of this beloved tree's plight. Indeed, it's plight is also ours!
Posted by Larry Glover on November 29,2008 | 09:07PM
My husband and I returned recently from a vacation in Four Corners country. The aspen trees west of Monticello, UT were lovely...but we did notice in Colorado damaged and apparently-dying ones. We live in Florida so aspens are only trees we enjoy seeing on trips to America's West or Canadian Rockies. Had no idea these marvellous trees were under attack with such vengeance from diseases and insects. May those with the knowledge and skill needed find a solution. Long live the aspen.
Posted by Cathy Katrovitz on December 3,2008 | 12:56PM
It would be nice if the Smithsonian at least once, acknowledged that over 32,000 scientists have signed the petition to the UN panel protesting the UN claim there is a "concensus" about "global warming" especially now that the last decade has been marked by global cooling. This article would make sense if it excluded the nonsense about "global warming" having some impact on the death of Aspen groves all over the West, which has been just as cyclical an event over the millenia as recurring ice ages followed by global warming, long before mankind populated North America.
Posted by J Schwartz on December 3,2008 | 08:39PM
I think a big part of the problem is that the forest service has taken such a strong stance against fire. I believe wildfire is nature's way of cleansing the forests. Allowing more wildfires to burn would improve the health of the remaining stands and regenerate new ones. After all, the forests survived for thosands of years before the forest service decided to "protect" them with fire suppression. Just my 2 cents worth.
Posted by Dean Bowe on December 5,2008 | 06:21PM
Predators are essential for forest health - please see http://www.forestry.oregonstate.edu/aspen/ - and read the book "Where the Wild Things Were"!
Posted by Vonnie Bestor on December 11,2008 | 12:25PM
Has anyone in the Sierras noticed a similar problem with the Aspens there? They are such a beautiful contrast to the evergreens. I didn't have a chance to drive through Hope Valley this fall' That is always a beautiful drive, but really spectacular when the Aspens are turning.
Posted by Elenita Mathew on December 13,2008 | 08:45AM
I am from Slovenia (graduated forestry studies) an on a work on Vail mountain. There is a lot of Aspen trees but cant find which species is most common. It is winter now and your help would be helpful. please post me on my e-mail. Martin
Posted by ilco on December 24,2008 | 10:36PM
Let it burn. Fire cleanses the forest, not blaming everything under the sun on global warming. These trees will be around long after humans have killed themselves off.
Posted by Flouncer on January 14,2009 | 08:50PM