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Forests on Forests

April 24, 202619 min · 4,325 words

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For much of history, tree canopies were pretty much completely ignored by science. It was as if researchers said collectively, "It's just going to be empty up there, and we've got our hands full studying the trees down here! So why bother?" But then around the mid-1980s, a few ecologists around the world got curious and started making their way up into the treetops using any means necessary (ropes, cranes, hot air dirigibles) to document all they could find. It didn't take long for them to realize not only was the forest canopy not empty, it was absolutely filled to the brim with life. You've heard of treehouses? How about tree gardens?! This week, we bring you a story we first released in 2022. We journey up into the sky and discover forests above the forest. We learn about the secret powers of these sky gardens from ecologist Korena Mafune, and we follow Nalini Nadkarni as she makes a ground-breaking discovery that changes how we understand what trees are capable of. P.S. This episode is a layer cake of arboreal surprises (including the reappearance of a certain retired host. LATERAL CUTS: From Tree to Shining Tree ( https://zpr.io/4cHtDdYTuNxT ): The episode that started this journey, where we look down instead of up. EPISODE CREDITS: Reported by - Annie McEwen Produced by - Annie McEwen EPISODE CITATIONS: Videos - Inside the Fight to Save an Ancient Forest (and the Secrets it Holds) ( https://zpr.io/XKipP2z4NFiM ), by Michael Werner, Joe Hanson, and the PBS Overview team. We first learned about the magical world of the canopy from this beautiful video. It features Korena Mafune’s research up in the treetops, as well as the people who have dedicated their lives to saving what’s left of the old growth forests. We highly recommend checking it out! Signup for our newsletter!! It includes short essays, recommendations, and details about other ways to interact with the show. Sign up (https://radiolab.org/newsletter)! Radiolab is supported by listeners like you. Support Radiolab by becoming a member of The Lab (https://members.radiolab.org/) today. Follow our show on Instagram , Twitter and Facebook @radiolab, and share your thoughts with us by emailing radiolab@wnyc.org . Leadership support for Radiolab’s science programming is provided by the Simons Foundation and the John Templeton Foundation. Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Highlighted moments

these tree canopies that up until the mid-80s, everyone thought were just pretty much empty, not only are they not empty, they actually hold about 50% of all terrestrial life on the planet.
Jump to 10:27 in the transcript
They found salamanders living hundreds of feet in the air who spend their entire lives never touching the ground.
Jump to 9:33 in the transcript
The big tree, the one Nalini is sitting in, is growing roots from its branch and snaking underneath these mats of soil, of canopy soil.
Jump to 19:11 in the transcript
When it's crumbs down below, up in the sky, held aloft above the plebeian masses, is like a Thanksgiving dinner.
Jump to 13:01 in the transcript

Transcript

Sponsor Introduction

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Forest Canopy Introduction

1:19Hey, I'm Latif Nasser. This is Radio Lab. One of our all-time most popular episodes was From Tree to Shining Tree,

1:52which was about these vast networks hidden in the forest floor. She began thinking about the forest that exists underneath the forest. That's Robert Kralwich, who was one of our hosts at the time. If you haven't heard the episode, you really should. We profiled this scientist, Suzanne Simard, who discovered, to even her own great surprise, these deeply complex interwoven mats of tree roots and mushroom threads connecting trees together,

2:22helping them communicate, even share resources. Like, there's a literal underground economy in every forest you've ever been to. Turns out one tree was connected to 47 other trees all around it. It was like a huge network. The trees that were the biggest and the oldest were the most highly connected. It's just this incredible communications network that, you know, people had no idea about in the past because we didn't know how to look. So that was back in 2016.

2:53A couple of years after that, the producer of that episode, Annie McKeown, brought to us another story that shocked us all over again because we realized that whole forest floor thing, that was just half of the story. So, in celebration of spring and all the things growing around us right now, we wanted to replay that episode about the other half of the story of what's going on in forests. And to do so, of course, that perfect pairing of producer Annie McKeown

3:26and emeritus Radiolab host Robert Kralwich.

Nalini Nadkarni Interview

3:30Okay, we're at long last ready to begin. Okay. Okay, so for this episode, I wanted to call you because I recently learned about this new layer to the story. Okay. So, in tree to shining tree, we look down under the ground. Right. Where do you think we should look now? Well, I guess I'd be inclined, if there was more news, I'd do more down. Okay. I think. Well, how about, okay, how about instead of looking down, we peer into a type of down that is in the up?

4:06Oh, okay. And to take us there. All righty. Forest royalty. I've read that you are known as the queen of the canopy. Is that true? Is that, where did that come from? I have no idea where that came from. I've also been called the mother of the forest canopy. Oh, my goodness. And now that I'm 67 years old, I think it's going to be sort of the dowager queen or the grandmother of the forest canopy. What about the empress? This is ecologist Nalini Nadkarni, who, like a lot of kids, spent a large part of her childhood up in trees.

4:37You know, you grab a branch, you put your leg over it, and suddenly you're up in the treetops. And for me, it was like kind of my place. I had this sort of chaotic, large family. You know, I'd come home from school with chores and homework. But the treetops of these eight maple trees that lined my parents' driveway were kind of my refuge. She'd spend whole afternoons up there just sitting and wondering. I look at the leaves and I go like, why does this branch have much yellower leaves than that branch, which has orange leaves? That's a good question.

5:07And it's like, well, what is going on? What is this, branch independence? Or, you know, I'd watch squirrels jumping from one tree to another and just think, God, you know, where do they go? And what if I attached a spool of thread to the back of one of them and I could trace where they go? But it was a place for my imagination to sort of run wild. Nalini grew up and followed that imagination to study ecology in grad school. This was back in like the early 1980s. And I was just starting out and I came to my graduate committee and I said, I know what I want to do with the rest of my career. I want to study the forest canopy.

5:39And they said, well, that's kind of like Tarzan and Jane stuff. You know, with so many questions to ask and answer on the forest floor, why do you have to go into the canopy? At that time, canopies were just basically not studied. They were hard to get up into and there didn't seem to be a lot of point. The scientific thinking was, there's just not a lot going on up there. But there was something about the canopy that I kind of just had this intuition that it's not enough to just stand on the ground and look up. And so, with some modified mountain climbing equipment,

6:11she began to climb these giant old growth trees in the Olympic rainforests of western Washington. Which is what's called a temperate rainforest. Are these the places where in the morning, the fog from the Pacific Ocean comes rolling in? Yeah. And the tree just gets an every morning bath of just pure moisture. Yeah, and the tree just goes... So, Nalini climbs up into the canopy of this giant big leaf maple tree. And I throw my leg over a branch and I'm sitting up there and I'm anchored with my rope and I'm looking around. I just see this enormous three-dimensional panoply

6:44of moving leaves and moving twigs. The branch she's sitting on, as well as all the branches surrounding her, are covered in this super thick layer of... This amazing growth of mosses and lichens and ferns. Kind of like the tree is wearing this very unruly green shag carpet. You get the sense of being in a place that looks very simple from the forest floor, but is actually this kaleidoscope of life.

7:12Her job up there was to take samples of the moss that was growing on these branches. I had to cut off chunks of it. So, using some clippers, she begins to cut down into that moss on the branch she's sitting on. And as I peeled back those mats of mosses... Beneath, instead of just bare branch... I saw that there was all this soil up there. This branch has a foot of soil piled up on it. Oh, wow. Soil that formed over many, many years of mosses and leaves dying and decomposing right there on the branch.

7:44It's so weird because you're sitting up there in the canopy, like 100 feet above the ground, and then you're digging your fingers into the soil that could be the soil that's, you know, in your backyard garden, for goodness sake. You can imagine getting your gardening gloves out and planting rows of tulips 100 feet in the air. There were, like, invertebrates in it. There were earthworms in it. Tree worms? Yes. That is so weird. I know! I know! Even the stars of the old episode, the fungi, were there. Really? So the mushrooms have climbed up the tree as well to sort of do their thing? They're sharing resources.

8:14They're helping the tiny plants up there communicate with one another. The same as on the forest floor. It's almost like she stumbled into a perfect miniature of the forest floor she had just climbed up away from. And straddling a branch way up high in the air, she's like, Huh! Well, that's cool! This was in the 80s, and since then there have been so many more, well, that's cools, because more and more scientists have been accessing this new world using cranes and ropes, or building platforms, or my favorite way up into a tree is this French guy, Francis Allais,

8:46who pioneered the use of the dirigible to access the canopy. Oh, wow. There's incredible pictures of these. So it's a balloon trip? It's a balloon that floats, yeah, that floats over the tops of this green ocean, just kissing the tops of the trees, and the scientists can just gently lean and trim this and that. Anyway, so one way or another, all over the world, scientists began getting themselves up into trees and documenting what they saw there. And some of the coolest discoveries were found on the West Coast

9:16in the old-growth redwood forests. And oh my gosh, these giants were found to be holding these pockets of soil up to three feet deep. And growing in the soil were flowers, berry bushes, mosses, lichens. They found salamanders living hundreds of feet in the air who spend their entire lives never touching the ground. I'm waiting if you say a small deer or something like that, or something very weird. I mean, I don't have a small deer for you, but I do have something that I find totally bizarre,

9:48which is that up in Redwoods, scientists have found these tiny aquatic creatures. An aquatic creature? It's aquatic, yeah. It's like this shrimp-like... They found a fish? Pretty much. It's like this shrimp-like thing, a species of something called a copepod. Copepods, which is actually this whole subclass of creatures. They're the most abundant animal in the ocean, and a huge part of the diet of baleen whales.

10:16This thing is like swimming around in these mossy mats and no one knows how it got there.

10:27Anyway, these tree canopies that up until the mid-80s, everyone thought were just pretty much empty, not only are they not empty, they actually hold about 50% of all terrestrial life on the planet. Did you say 50%? 50, 5-0, yeah. Wow, that's a weird note. You're saying 50% of it is up in the air somewhere? Yeah, up in the air, up in trees. Whoa. Which, you know, sounds kind of unbelievable, but when you think of places like the Amazon, all those bugs, birds, plants, animals,

10:58it adds up. And most of this life has made a home in these canopy soils. What? Soil on the tree branches? And when ecologist Karina Mifune learned about these canopy soils? I fell in love. I was like, okay, there's like a forest in a forest on a forest. I need to research this. And she told me that thinking about these canopy soils, like these tiny, perfect replicas of the forest floor below, wasn't quite right. Because these canopy soils, they have something that the forest wants.

11:30Huh. Well, what would that be? Well, back when she was a grad student in the Washington Olympic Peninsula, Karina collected soil samples from the forest floor throughout the year. And she noticed that in the spring growing season, there aren't as many nutrients available. Specifically, there was a lack of phosphorus and nitrogen, two important things that every plant in the springtime wants to help them, you know, put forth new leaves, to help them grow. And those are rare. Plants love that. Right. Yeah.

12:01And in contrast to the last episode where we talked about trees cooperating with each other. All these trees, all these trees that were of totally different species were sharing their food underground. Like, if you put... Karina told me that in that same sharing forest, when resources are scarce... There's a ton of competition on the forest floor. Trees have roots grafted together. There's mycorrhizal networks, you know, that are spanning across. There's this big battle to, you know, uptake nutrients.

12:30But... Karina had also taken samples of the canopy soils. And she saw that during these times of scarcity below... These canopy soils had so much more nitrogen and phosphorus available for plant uptake compared to their forest floor counterparts. Meaning that this soil for a plant was creme de la creme. It's just amazing. Amazing. Downstairs... There's shortage. Upstairs... There's abundance.

13:01When it's crumbs down below, up in the sky, held aloft above the plebeian masses, is like a Thanksgiving dinner. And when Karina learned this, she thought, I don't know. What do these canopy soils mean? Because they're not just hanging out there. They're not just there for no reason, right?

13:21She's right. They're not. These sky gardens, they get even better. Better at what? Hmm? Better at what? Well, let's just say they're not alone up there. What's about to happen?

Canopy Soil Discovery

13:35Well, I'm going to tell you. All righty. Right after this short break.

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17:38Lulu. Lattif.

Tree Root Systems

17:40Radiolab.

Tree Root Systems

17:40Back to Annie and Robert where we were just about to learn the true superpower of those gardens in the sky. Right. So to understand this wizardry, we need to go back to Nalini. Fine with me. And this amazing discovery that she made. Okay. So I remember sitting on this tree. She's back up in a tree in the Washington rainforest, digging around in this canopy soil. And I began seeing these root systems that were running up and down the branches of these trees. They didn't look like they belonged to moss or ferns or any other plant you could see up there.

18:11And there were fine roots all the way up to, some of them were the diameter of my wrist. I mean, these were gigantic roots. What? And I thought, well, that's weird. What are these roots doing here? Huh. So I began just tracing the roots that I was finding. Like you took hold of one root in your hand and sort of like went backwards like a string? Exactly like it's like following a string. Exactly. She gently excavates this root, scooting along the branch as she uncovers it. I was tied in so I could sort of swing around and move from one branch to another.

18:42I had my water bottle with me so then whenever it began difficult to sort of unstick the root, I could just throw a little water on it, keep going, keep following it. It was like, I don't know, it was like being a detective. Well, what did you think it was going to lead to? I had no idea. I thought, well, maybe there's some sort of vascular plant that I'm not aware of that's here, but I don't think so. So then she follows the root all the way back to its beginning and oh my gosh, its origin was a dead end in the tree itself. What? The big tree,

19:13the one Nalini is sitting in, is growing roots from its branch and snaking underneath these mats of soil, of canopy soil. Let me think about this. Somehow it realizes that it could find soil high up somewhere like, and so it just takes its roots and its roots travel up and go whoop to the left and say, let's root not only where we normally root down there, but let's root up here. Yes. Whoa. So things that you thought were below can move above, way above,

19:43high above you. Yes. It was a real revelation.

19:50And Karina thinks that it's during a drought or during spring growing season when resources on the forest floor are scarce that these big trees, that's when they can tap into their canopy soils. It's like, they're like, hey, there's a bunch of really great stuff here to suck on, so why don't you put out a root out here? And that's exactly what these trees do. I kind of always compare it to, like, a secret cabinet that has all the good snacks in it. It's like if you were teaching a preschool, it's like, while all of the

20:20school children are fighting over the snacks and fighting over these resources, you just go into your, you know, canopy soil closet and you got your good snacks up there. Because we're looking for those special minerals like the phosphorus and stuff, and that's where we can find it. Right. And it's finding it in its hat. And you're finding it in its hat. That's a nice way of putting it. Yes. Yeah.

20:45That's a lovely way of putting it.

20:48The expression, I'm going to eat my hat, has now got a whole new meaning. Oh, yes! Robert! I love that. Yeah.

21:00One thing that both Karina and Nalini told me is that this is a new field. There is just so many things to be found high above the forest floor. Like, for instance, Karina told me sometimes there are actual trees growing up there. And I've seen like a five-foot spruce growing out of a nook of canopy soil. Wow. And you'll see a lot of like baby maples growing up in the old maple, so it's like, you know, like a little nursery. Wait a second, you mean there's a tree growing on the tree? That's right. On the branch? In the soil on the branch. Oh.

21:32And who knows? Maybe as more people study the canopy, we'll find little trees on those trees. And maybe there will be little trees on those trees on those trees. Yeah. It's fractal, like littler plants off the ground and then little on them is the moss, which is little plants on top of little plants. So there's like, there's little layers and layers and layers of life and the more you go up, the more the layers you will find. it's very cool.

22:04Thank you, Annie McKeown, for reporting and producing that gorgeous episode and leaving us with that image of not turtles all the way down, but trees all the way up. This episode was reported and produced by Annie McKeown. Special thanks to Kiyomi Taguchi, Michelle Ma, and Nina Ernest.

22:36A huge thank you to Michael Werner and Joe Hanson and the team at PBS Overview. They tipped us off about Karina's research. They were the ones who got us excited about canopy soil in the first place. You can actually see all that gorgeous shag carpeting in the forest in their beautiful video, vivid color. The video features Karina and other people who have dedicated their lives to saving what's left of the old growth forest. You can check that out on our website or on theirs.

23:07So thank you to them. And special thanks, of course, to the many ringed tree trunk that is Robert Kralwich coming back on the show to talk trees with us. Thank you for doing that, Robert. We love you. That guy's all bark. No bite. You know what I mean? That's why I like him. That's all for us. Catch you next week.

23:34Hi, I'm Gabby. I'm from the Bay Area, California, and here are the staff credits. Radiolab is hosted by Lulu Miller and Latif Nasser. Soran Wheeler is our executive editor. Sarah Sandback is our executive director. Our managing editor is Pat Walters. Dylan Keefe is our director of sound design. Our staff includes Jeremy Bloom, W. Harry Fortuna, David Gable, Maria Paz Gutierrez, Sindhu Nainasambandan, Matt Kielty, Mona Modgauker, Annie McEwan,

24:04Alex Neeson, Sarah Kari, Natalia Ramirez, Rebecca Rand, Anissa Vitsa, Arian Wack, Molly Webster, and Jessica Young, with help from Gabby Santis. Our fact checkers are Diane Kelly, Emily Krieger, Natalie Middleton, Anjali Mercado, and Sophie Semayi. Hi, I'm Aubrey, calling from Salt Lake City, Utah. Leadership support for Radiolab's science programming is provided by

24:34the Simons Foundation and the John Templeton Foundation. Foundational support for Radiolab was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Radiolab is supported by Capital One. With no fees or minimums on checking accounts, it's no wonder that Capital One bank guy is so passionate about banking with Capital One. If he were here, he wouldn't just tell you about no fees or minimums, he'd also talk about how Capital One cafes are open seven days a week

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