Gail

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I worried that in the long haul, in the decades to come, the reduction in soil nitrogen would reduce the growth rates of the open-grown pines that remained. Eventually I would learn that these alderless pines would become so malnourished that they’d be infested by the mountain pine beetle, and most of the rest would die. Three decades later, only 10 percent of the original seedlings planted in the bare-earth treatment would remain.
Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest
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