Dead Wood: The Afterlife of Trees - Natural Wood Decor for Rustic Home & Garden - Perfect for DIY Projects, Wall Art, and Eco-Friendly Landscaping
$11.96
$21.75
Safe 45%
Dead Wood: The Afterlife of Trees - Natural Wood Decor for Rustic Home & Garden - Perfect for DIY Projects, Wall Art, and Eco-Friendly Landscaping
Dead Wood: The Afterlife of Trees - Natural Wood Decor for Rustic Home & Garden - Perfect for DIY Projects, Wall Art, and Eco-Friendly Landscaping
Dead Wood: The Afterlife of Trees - Natural Wood Decor for Rustic Home & Garden - Perfect for DIY Projects, Wall Art, and Eco-Friendly Landscaping
$11.96
$21.75
45% Off
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Description
The west is full of magnificent trees: mighty spruces, towering cedars, and stout firs. We are used to appreciating trees during their glory years, but how often do we consider what happens to a tree when it dies? We’ve all seen driftwood on the beach. But how many people have truly looked at it and appreciated its ecological role?   Ellen Wohl has thought about these questions, and In Dead Wood, she takes us through the afterlife of trees, describing the importance of standing and downed dead wood in forests, in rivers, along beaches, in the open ocean, and even at the deepest parts of the seafloor. Downed wood in the forest provides habitat for diverse plants and animals, and the progressive decay of the wood releases nutrients into the soil. Wood in rivers provides critical habitat for stream insects and fish and can accumulate in logjams that divert the river repeatedly across the valley floor, creating a floodplain mosaic that is rich in habitat and biodiversity. Driftwood on the beach helps to stabilize shifting sand, creating habitat for plants and invertebrates. Fish such as tuna congregate at driftwood in the open ocean. As driftwood becomes saturated and sinks to the ocean floor, collections of sunken wood provide habitat and nutrients for deep-sea organisms. Far from being an unsightly form of waste that needs to be cleaned from forests, beaches, and harbors, dead wood is a critical resource for many forms of life.  Dead Wood follows the afterlives of three trees: a spruce in the Colorado Rocky Mountains that remains on the floodplain after death; a redcedar in Washington that is gradually transported downstream to the Pacific; and a poplar in the Mackenzie River of Canada that is transported to the Arctic Ocean. With these three trees, Wohl encourages readers to see beyond landscapes, to appreciate the ecological processes that drive rivers and forests and other ecosystems, and demonstrates the ways that the life of an ecosystem carries on even when individual members of that system have died. Readers will discover that trees can have an exceptionally rich afterlife—one tightly interwoven with the lives of humans and ecosystems.
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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
As this book was gifted to me, its purchase can't be 'verified' (sorry about that), but it was read and enjoyed. Wohl uses the lives of three trees, in different watersheds, as the vehicle to explore in detail how a tree interacts -- both while alive and after it dies -- with its surroundings.She follows the roots of her first tree studied down into the soil ecosystem, where fungi, water, and minerals serve to produce nutritional elements, and its branches up into the light for photosynthesis, and, after it falls, its role in the stream and river systems where its debris is gradually reduced while supporting other life. She follows two other trees (in different terrains and watersheds) through their own lives and after-life. The trees thus serve as the narrative device used to explore and explain ecological niches, interactions and differing regional systems.For this non-scientist who nonetheless reads about the natural sciences, the book offered an in-depth but very accessible exploration not solely of trees (and woody debris) but holistically of the mechanisms of entire ecosystems. The tale flows well, offers broadly-applicable perspectives, and provides many intriguing details and insights about natural functions.

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