If you compare the sequence
in the slide show above with what's happening now you'll
realise that these perfect conditions are unlikely to happen
again.
The few giant trees that are spared from logging have everything
around them chopped down. This leaves them standing exposed
and vulnerable to lightning, erosion and wind damage. The ground
around the tree is no longer shaded and becomes drier and harder
than it once was. With all these things working against it,
the giant is doomed to die much earlier than it should have.

This ancient
log (above) used to be the trunk of
a giant tree.
It's slowly decaying into the soil, providing nutrients for
the
next generation of giants.
But what about
new trees? Why can't they become giants?
There are lots of things stopping them:
- First, you have
to wait several hundred years. Call me impatient
if you like, but I can't wait that long.
- When
an area is clear-felled there are no tall trees left
behind. The sunlight can reach every new seedling.
This means there is no competition for the sunlight - the
fast-growers and the slow growers can reach maturity.
The
selection
process
that favours fast-growing giants is diminished.
- Because
the old trees were taken away, with the remaining timber
burnt and napalmed, there will be no nutrients
left to decay back into the soil. Those nutrients
are needed to
provide the tremendous hit of fertiliser that it
takes to grow a giant tree. This will only get worse with
each successive
generation of trees taken away from the soil.
- With the
areas of best soils and highest rainfalls already cleared
and claimed for plantations, Eucalyptus
regnans
is being pushed into places that are less favourable
for growing
giants.
- During the late 1800s there was a competition
to chop down the tallest tree. This removed most of
the giants
from the
gene pool. The smaller, shorter-growing trees
were left to produce seed.
- It takes the right combination
of perfect climate, altitude, rainfall, and soils,
plus surviving lightning,
wind,
parasites, fire and other hazards for three
or four hundred years to
produce a few giant trees. Climate change
is causing instability in the weather and more extreme
droughts
and flooding - that
mature trees are less able to cope with.
The extreme
droughts also increase the number and severity
of bush fires.
When you consider how difficult it is,
and how long it takes to make a giant, it seems crazy to
chop them all down for
woodchips - a product which is basically the same as mulch.
I visited Tasmania in the early 1990s to see the great forests
while it was still possible. I'm glad I did, but I also feel
sorry for people younger than me who missed the chance, because
most of those spectacular forests I saw are already gone.
I just wish I'd taken more - and better - photos.
The last
great area I saw briefly, with some of the most gigantic
trees I thought possible, was the Styx Valley. When
I went there in the early 1990s I was told that legislation
had ensured that the Styx Valley would never, ever be logged.
I was even considered a fool for suggesting that might
change. Of course it is the new area planned for extensive
logging.
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Tall tree
This Eucalyptus regnans (above) is one of several growing along
the Tall Trees Walk in Tasmania's Mount Field National Park.
Perspective gives the impression that all the branches are
at the very top of the tree, while the truth is that those
branches start only about a third of the way up the trunk. |