CROWN SHYNESS
– AN AMAZING PHENOMENON -
G'day folks,
I bet most of you know nothing about this. I certainly didn't.
In his 1955
book “Growth Habits of the Eucalypts”, Australian forester M.R. Jacobs
writes that the growing tips of the trees are sensitive to abrasion, which
results in the canopy gaps known as crown shyness. In 1986, this theory was
also supported by Dr Miguel Franco, who noticed that the branches of
Picea sitchensis (Sitka spruce) and Larix kaempferi trees suffered physical
damage during abrasion, which killed the leading branches. Some
experiments have shown that if trees displaying crown shyness are artificially
prevented from swaying in the wind and colliding with each other, they
gradually fill up the gaps between them.
But while the above theory is arguably the most widespread,
it’s certainly not the only one. Some scientists have suggested that crown
shyness is a mechanism to stop the spreading of leaf-eating insects. These
pests have been known to work together and create structures that extend up to
10 cm off of tree branches, in order to reach other plants, so the gaps are the
tree’s natural defense mechanism.
Amusing Planet cites one Malaysian scholar
who studied the Dryobalanops
aromatica trees, but found no traces of abrasions, despite
their clear crown shyness. Instead, he suggests that the growing tips of the
trees were sensitive to light levels and stopped growing when they got too
close to other trees. Science also supports this theory, as plants are able to
sense how close they are to other plants by detecting a specific frequency of
light called far-red light.
This allows them to compete with their neighbours
over light needed to keep growing.
Clancy's comment: Wow. Wonders never cease, eh?
I'm ...
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