Title: Chestnut Restoration
1Chestnut Restoration
Yvonne Federowicz Bruce Goodsell Harvey Perry The
American Chestnut Foundation
- Brief History of Chestnut and the Blight
- The American Chestnut Foundation
- The State Chapters
- TACF 23rd Annual Meeting
Presentation Outline
2American Chestnut(Castanea dentata)
- Ranged from Maine to Georgia and west of the
Mississippi River - Over 200 million acres
3American Chestnut
- Early in the 20th century, the Appalachian
Mountains were full of giant chestnuts
4American Chestnut
- Early in the 20th century, the Appalachian
Mountains were full of giant chestnuts - Chestnuts were abundant.
5American Chestnut
- Early in the 20th century, the Appalachian
Mountains were full of giant chestnuts - Chestnuts were abundant
- Tree diameters of 8 to 10 ft. across were often
reported. One in Francis Cove east of
Waynesville, NC was 17 feet across, 53 feet
around.
6American Chestnut
- Early in the 20th century, the Appalachian
Mountains were full of giant chestnuts - Chestnuts were abundant
- Tree diameters of 8 to 10 ft. across were often
reported. One in Francis Cove east of
Waynesville was 17 feet across, 53 feet around. - Chestnut grew tall (up to 125 ft.) and straight
-- often clear of branches up to 75 ft., making
them ideal lumber
7From Maine to Georgia?
- A squirrel was said to be able to run through
chestnut trees from Maine to Georgia without
touching the ground.
8American Chestnut
- Chestnuts were an important wildlife food source,
forming a staple for such animals as turkey,
ruffed grouse, black bear and many others.
9American Chestnut
- Chestnuts were important to native Americans for
- Food eaten raw, boiled, dried, roasted for a
coffee-like beverage ground into flour - Shelter
- Medicine
- Transportation hollowed-out log canoes
10American Chestnut
- Chestnut was an extremely important commodity for
the early European settlers of the Appalachians.
Uses included - Nuts for food, mast, and cash
- Tanning hides
- Building materials
11- Chestnutting was a favorite Fall activity for
both rural and urban residents - Thoreau noted that large numbers of New Yorkers
went a-nutting each autumn - Rhode Islanders did too
1870 Chestnutting by Winslow Homer
12American Chestnut
- Chestnut wood was used extensively by the early
settlers for cabins, shingles fences.
13American Chestnut
- Chestnut was also an important wood for furniture
making.
14American Chestnut
- In the South, chestnut bark and wood were also
used for tannin extraction. This industry lasted
into the 1950s using dead chestnut.
15Chestnut was extensively used for utility
poles and railroad ties in New England Some were
not even treated due to chestnuts rot resistance
- Cape Cod Chestnut pole still in service since
1928!
16The Chestnut Blight
- Blight probably arrived on Asian chestnuts in the
1890s in Long Island - The blight was first discovered in 1904 in the
Bronx Zoological Park, Bronx, NY. - Moving 50 mi/yr, within 50 yrs it had spread
throughout chestnuts entire range - One canker produces billions of airborne spores
17Rhode Islanders had Very little time to respond
to the blightWe are close to Ground
ZeroNearly half our forest was
chestnutPeople had to watch beloved, 10-ft
diameter trees die
18The Chestnut Blight
- People took time to identify the problem, then
more time to decide what to do. - As the blight advanced, people decided to try to
clear chestnut ahead in a firebreak zone. - It didnt work. Nothing worked.
19The Chestnut Blight
- As a result, federal agencies began to push for
plant quarantines - By the 1950s, chestnut was virtually eliminated
as a dominant forest tree
20Local USDA History with Chestnut Blight
- One of the first local USDA branch offices opened
in the early 1910s at Brown University under
Prof. James Franklin Collins - Early experiments at hybridizing Asian American
chestnuts were planned - Collins also left us with hundreds of valuable
local chestnut photographs
From Arbor Day, RI 1911
21The Chestnut Blight
- The blight is caused by a fungus, Cryphonectria
parasitica (formerly, Endothia parasitica) - Chinese and Japanese chestnuts have evolved
significant resistance - European chestnuts are somewhat more resistant
than American chestnuts, which have low to no
resistance
22The Chestnut Blight
- Blight enters the tree through the cracks typical
of chestnut bark and through wounds - Luckily, chestnut roots are not affected and
chestnut often resprouts
23The Chestnut Blight
- It forms a canker and quickly girdles the tree
- American Chestnuts try to fight by increasing
tannin production, to no avail - Asian chestnuts seem to have 3 genes involved in
resistance
24The Chestnut Blight
- The blight fungus is devastating for a number of
reasons - No effective resistance in American chestnut.
- Abundant production of spores on diseased bark.
- Multiple hosts chinkapins, oaks, shagbark
hickory, red maple sumac. - Spores stick on birds and animals.
- Adapted to a variety of environmental conditions.
- Rapid host mortality preventing natural selection
for host resistance. - Ability to survive on dried herbaceous material.
25The Chestnut Blight
- Some strains of the fungus have been found that
are infected with a virus - These strains are capable of reducing the
virulence of other strains and sometimes stop
canker enlargement when introduced into wounds
around canker
26Hypovirulence
- Has been very effective in Europe.
- Has been somewhat effective at West Salem, WI
27The Chestnut Blight
- Two factors have help prevent American chestnut
from total obliteration - The blight fungus cannot survive in soil.
- American chestnut has a tremendous capacity to
produce stump sprouts.
28Chestnut Restoration Efforts
- Brief History of Chestnut and the Blight
- The American Chestnut Foundation
- The State Chapters
- The Future
Presentation Outline
29The American Chestnut Foundationwww.acf.org
- Founded in 1983 as a non-profit organization,
largely supported by membership contributions. - Goal To restore the American chestnut tree to
the eastern U.S. through a scientific program of
breeding and cooperative research. - Primary approach is to use the backcross method
of plant breeding to transfer blight resistance
of the Chinese chestnut into American chestnut.
Dr. Charles Burnham
30The American Chestnut FoundationFacilities
- Headquarters Bennington, Vermont
- Research Farms Meadowview, Virginia
- Southern Appalachian Regional Office Asheville,
North Carolina - Central Region Penn State
- New England Region Yale University
31The American Chestnut FoundationState Chapters
- Alabama
- Carolinas (NC/SC)
- Indiana
- Kentucky
- Maine
- Maryland
- Massachusetts/Rhode Island
- New York
- Ohio
- Pennsylvania
- Tennessee
- Connecticut
- Georgia
- Virginia
- Vermont/New Hampshire
Map of Chapters?
32The American Chestnut Foundation
Dr. Fred Hebard
- Meadowview Research Farm
- Wagner Farm established 1989
- Price Farm Established 1996
- 3rd Farm purchase in 2002
33The American Chestnut Foundation
Control Pollinations
34The American Chestnut FoundationChinese vs.
American Chestnut
35TACFs Backcross Breeding Program
- Each generation select for
- Blight resistance
- American characteristics
36Chestnut Restoration Efforts in State Chapters
- Brief History of Chestnut and the Blight
- The American Chestnut Foundation
- The State Chapters
- TACF 23rd Annual Meeting
Presentation Outline
37(No Transcript)
38The MA/RI Chapter - TACF
- Founded in 2000
- 425 members
- Annual meetings and semi-annual newsletter
- Breeding activities
- 28 Orchards
- 6,500 trees in the ground
Littleton
Moore state park
Tower Hill Botanic Garden
39Mother Tree Programs in State Chapters Capture
Regional Diversity.
- Find and pollinate large surviving trees that
have many female flowers
65 Foot High Chestnut Tree on the Prescot
Peninsula of the Quabbin Reservoir
40TACFs Backcross Breeding Program
State Chapters
41How Utilities Help
Meeting Space
Provide Bucket Trucks for Pollinations
Wood Chips
42Recent TACF Events
- Planting of tree at White House, Arbor Day 2005
Picture
43Recent Events
- Memorandum of Understanding with the U.S. Forest
Service.
44Recent Events
- Centennial Forest Service Event
45Recent Local Events
- Westerly Land Trust began an orchard in spring
07
46(No Transcript)
47More Recent Events
- Planting and Exhibit at the Carter Center
- Planting and Exhibit at the Smithsonian
48TACF-23rd Annual Meeting Report
Forging Ahead At Meadowview
OCTOBER 19-22 ABINGDON MEADOWVIEW VIRGINIA
49TACF 23rd National Meeting HighlightsMeadowview
Virginia
- Wild Turkey Federation MOU
- Science Review
- Grant from National Science Foundation
- Breeding Progress (Seed Plots)
- Pew Foundation Grant
- Science Presentations
- TACF Growth
50Wild Turkey Federation
- Chestnut and turkeys go together!
- 1800 Chapters in the US
- Over 500,000 Members
- Affiliates in Canada and Mexico
- Memorandum of Understanding signed with TACF to
help in the restoration of American Chestnut
51Second Science Audit
- Team of Internationally recognized scientists
reviewed the TACF breeding program - Recommendations Overall very favorable.
- Suggestions
- Do more genetic research on the genes for
resistance - Use less potent blight in screening techniques
- At research farm, to continue back crossing to
BC6 generation - Find name for end product and develop a
commercial strategy to help reintroduction. - Develop more Chinese lines of resistance
52Chestnut Genome Project
- Grant to begin work on mapping the Chestnut
Genome. - 1.2 Million just begins the process
- Work will be done multinational group of
Scientists. - TACF and Connecticut Agricultural Station will
provide Chestnut material - Purdue, Syracuse, North Carolina State and Penn
State will be involved in the project
53Meadowview Breeding Program Progress
- Seed Plot Stage BC3 F3
- Large Surviving American Orchard Bank
- Additional farm land purchase for seed orchards
- Bob Paris is looking for new lines of Chinese
resistance
54Seed Plots for BC3 x F2 Nuts
The two best survivors of each 150 tree plot
become producers of BC3 F3 seed when open
pollinated. This generation will be put back
into the forest and breed true for blight
resistance!
Inoculated BC3F2
1 foot spacing
Two-year-old plot
55LSA (Large Surviving American) OrchardVA
56- Grant used for
- Science Review
- Three Years for New England Regional Breeding
Coordinator - Leila Pinchot
57Science Presentations
- Key Note Fred Paillet
- Contribution of the West Salem Stand to Chestnut
Science
58Workshops Biology of the Tree (Bob Paris) Public
Relations (Meghan Jordan, Jeanne Coleman) Pests
and Diseases (Sara Fitzsimmons)
59Science Presentations
- Place Names and American Chestnut Restoration
- Dr. Songlin Fei
- NSF Project and Chestnut Genetics
- Dr. Paul Sisco
- Evolutionary History of American Chestnut Species
- Dr. Fenny Dane
60TACF Growth
- 1983 founded with 25 members and a 5,000 budget.
- Today in 2006 5,600 members and a budget of 1.6
million
61(No Transcript)
62Breeding efforts are progressing so that blight
resistant American chestnuts with will be ready
for forest restoration efforts over the next 3-10
years. RI/MA is closer to 5-8 years away.
A Chestnut Seedling Near The Quabbin Reservoir
Mother Tree
63Reforestation
- The Massive Undertaking of Reintroduction of
Chestnut into the Forest - USDA Can Help This Future Project!
64Please Visit
www.acf.org
masschestnut.org