Alaska Science Forum
February 27, 2003Article #1635
by Ned Rozell
This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer at the institute.
Forester Tom Malone recently guided me on a trek to see Alaska's largest
black spruce tree. It was a short adventure. The 71-foot tree is a two-minute
walk from my office.
The Alaska champion black spruce tree stands on the campus of the University
of Alaska Fairbanks. The tree lives in a mixed forest next to large white
spruce trees, mature birch, and a few alders and willows. The tree leans
uphill, and its trunk is 45 inches around. When I hugged it, I could barely
clasp my hands together. The largest black spruce in Alaska is a lucky tree,
because its neighbors to the north are gone, removed in the mid 1990s during
the installation of a power line.
The Alaska champion black spruce stood exposed for a few years before a researcher
visiting from Iceland, a land of many volcanoes but few trees, pointed it
out to forest geneticist John Alden as they walked by in spring of 2001.
"
He said, 'That's a black spruce,'" Alden said. "I said, no, it
was too large. I didn't think it could be a black spruce."
Alden, a longtime university forest geneticist who now works at the Alaska
Division of Forestry, thought the tree was a type of white spruce that is
darker green and has coarser bark than other white spruce. When the snow
melted, Alden walked back to the tree and saw beneath it the telltale sign
of black spruce-pudgy cones, about one inch long. White spruce cones are
longer and pointier.
Alden nominated the black spruce in "The Big Tree Challenge," a
nationwide program that is run in Alaska by Tom Malone, a research assistant
at the UAF Department of Forest Sciences. Malone used a laser-measuring
device to confirm the tree's height of 71 feet, which bested the old record
of 65
feet for a tree that stands near where the Tolovana River empties into
the Tanana River in interior Alaska.
Alaska's largest black spruce stands up well against national competition.
The U.S. record is a 78-foot black spruce in Taylor County, Wisconsin, according
to the National Register of Big Trees. The tallest trees are not always the
winners of The Big Tree Challenge; foresters score trees on height, circumference,
and the spread of a tree's crown.
The black spruce on the UAF campus is taller than the state record western
paper birch, a 67-footer near Haines, and Alaska's tallest balsam poplar,
a 60-foot tree on the Kuskokwim River. Alaska's current champion white spruce
will soon give up its title, Malone said. The 112-foot tree in the floodplain
of the Tok River is dying from an exposed root system.
Other Alaska state champions are a 126-foot quaking aspen off Cache Creek
Road west of Fairbanks, a 132-foot black cottonwood providing a lofty perch
for eagles in Haines, a western hemlock standing 150 feet tall on Admiralty
Island, and a Sitka spruce near Exchange Cove on Prince of Wales Island that
is perhaps the tallest tree in the state at 185 feet.
I say "perhaps" because Malone and Alden both think larger
trees are out there in Alaska-people either haven't noticed them or haven't
nominated
them. If you know of a big tree that might be an Alaska champion, get
in touch with Malone at (907) 474-7079 or fntpm@uaf.edu. A tree near
you may
already be a winner.