Meet the new royal family.From monoliths to minutiae mi·nu·ti·a n. pl. mi·nu·ti·ae A small or trivial detail: "the minutiae of experimental and mathematical procedure" Frederick Turner. , the 840 champions on our updated National Register present a fascinating gallery of plant life at its best. Sometime around 2000 BC, in a meadow on the gentle west slope of the Sierra Nevada Sierra Nevada, mountain range, Spain Sierra Nevada (syā`rä nāvä`thä), chief mountain range of S Spain, in Granada prov., running from east to west for c.60 mi (100 km), parallel to the Mediterranean Sea. , a western-juniper seed took root and started to grow. Today, after 4,000 years of stoic endurance, that same juniper is still growing and, apparently, thriving. Just a hair under 100 percent of everything we know about human history can be correlated to one or more of the annual rings in this Methuselah of champion trees. Considering its apparent good health and relative isolation, it will probably be recording history for centuries, if not millennia, to come. Other champions of extremely long-lived and well-surveyed species - like the Rocky Mountain juniper, bristlecone pine, and giant sequoia - are also probably secure in their royal status until a future time we can barely imagine. Most other champion trees will not be so lucky. Some big trees are crowned even as they are beginning to fall apart in old age. Many others enjoy only a short reign before someone finds an even bigger specimen. A few even rise and fall before they can be recognized in the National Register of Big Trees The National Register of Big Trees is a list of the largest living specimens of each tree variety found in the continental United States. A tree on this list is often called a National Champion Tree. , published every two years. Here is an update on the world of champion trees. Out of the hundreds of nominations received since the 1994 edition of the Register, 198 contenders, representing 177 species, have made it onto the 1996 list. All but six are new champions, the exceptions being a former champion honeylocust in Virginia that was reinstated when the Michigan champion lost points due to crown damage, a former champion cat-claw acacia in New Mexico that was reinstated when the Arizona champion was reported to have been incorrectly measured, a former champion common hoptree in Michigan reinstated when the Connecticut champion was reported to have been incorrectly measured, and two former co-champion American smoketrees in Indiana and Ohio, and a former champion Pacific red elder in Oregon, all reinstated due to incorrect measurement of the 1994 champions. The total number of champions has grown by 43 to 840 while the number of species represented has increased from 681 to 704. The new champs range from the tiny 22-point roughleaf velvetseed on Totten Key, Florida, to the towering 681-point sugar pine near Darrington, California. The velvetseed, only eight feet tall and four inches in diameter, also holds the distinction of being the smallest of our big trees. It is joined in the featherweight division by 23 other rookie monarchs that score less than 50 points. Of these mighty midgets, only the cinnamon clethra in Great Smoky Mountains National Park Great Smoky Mountains National Park National preserve, eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina, U.S. It is 20 mi (32 km) wide and extends southwest for 54 mi (87 km) from the Pigeon River to the Little Tennessee River. Established in 1934 to preserve the U.S. reaches higher than 30 feet, and only the jumping cholla of Mesa, Arizona, and the Florida elder of Marion County, Florida Marion County is a county located in the U.S. state of Florida. As of 2000, the population was 258,916. The U.S. Census Bureau 2005 estimate for the county is 303,442 [1]. Its county seat is Ocala, Florida6. , have diameters exceeding eight inches. In the heavyweight division of new champions, the sugar pine, with a 37-foot circumference and a 232-foot height, now ranks No. 8 among all champion trees (for details on this massive tree, see "Rediscovering the Super Sugar," page 21, American Forests, July/August 1994). The new Monterey-cypress champion in Pescadero County, California, isn't far behind at No. 10 with 656 points. Eleven other additions to the list have a total score of more than 400 points, including such familiar trees as the American beech, red maple red maple see acerrubrum. , and pecan. For 56 years AMERICAN FORESTS has inspired people across the country to be on the lookout for in search of; looking for. See also: Lookout potential champion trees, so you might think new one would be almost impossible to find. But except in the case of extremely rare trees, there's never any certainty that the current champion of a given species is the absolute biggest - it's just the biggest nominated so far. And sometimes trees on the list fall far short of their species' true potential. The new Ozark chinkapin Noun 1. chinkapin - small nut of either of two small chestnut trees of the southern United States; resembles a hazelnut chincapin, chinquapin edible nut - a hard-shelled seed consisting of an edible kernel or meat enclosed in a woody or leathery shell in Claiborne County, Mississippi Claiborne County is a county located in the U.S. state of Mississippi. As of 2000, the population is 11,831. Its county seat is Port Gibson6. The county is named after William C. C. Claiborne, the second governor of the Mississippi Territory. , beat out the champion from Clark County, Arkansas Clark County is a county located in the U.S. state of Arkansas. As of 2000, the population was 23,546. The county seat is Arkadelphia. Clark County is Arkansas's third county, formed on December 15, 1818 alongside Hempstead and Pulaski counties. , by 84 points with a girth GIRTH., A girth or yard is a measure of length. The word is of Saxon origin, taken from the circumference of the human body. Girth is contracted from girdeth, and signifies as much as girdle. See Ell. over three times bigger! The 152-point champion common chokecherry chokecherry: see cherry. chokecherry One of several varieties of shrub or small tree (Prunus virginiana) of the rose family, native to North America. in Ada, Michigan, recently fell to a 259-point tree in Owings Mills, Maryland Owings Mills is an unincorporated community and a census-designated place in Baltimore County, Maryland, United States. The population was 20,193 at the 2000 census. Owings Mills is home to the northern terminus for the Baltimore Metro Subway and to Owings Mills Mall. . The biggest margin of victory was a 144-point plastering plastering, house construction technique involving the application of plaster to walls and ceilings, exterior plasterwork being of a different composition and generally known as stucco. by the new Monterey cypress Monterey cypress cupressusmacrocarpa. . Though only six feet taller and one foot wider in the crown spread than the old champ in Brookings, Oregon, its circumference stretches the measuring tape an additional 11 1/2 feet. The biggest jump in relative size was achieved by the new champion common juniper. The old 18-foot-tall Michigan champ is still huge for a species that is more used to being stepped over than looked up to, but the new champion, also in Michigan, is more than twice as big in all measurements. The distribution of champion trees among the 50 states depends primarily on climate (trees grow fast in the wet Pacific Northwest, for example), endemism (many species are found only in California, Texas, or Florida), and sometimes the efforts of big-tree hunters who tend to concentrate their searches in areas close to home. The last two factors are why Florida has more than one-third (64) of the new champions. Botany professor Daniel B. Ward of the University of Florida University of Florida is the third-largest university in the United States, with 50,912 students (as of Fall 2006) and has the eighth-largest budget (nearly $1.9 billion per year). UF is home to 16 colleges and more than 150 research centers and institutes. took on the daunting daunt tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay. [Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin task of relocating and remeasuring all 117 of Florida's 1994 national champions. In the process a number of champs were dethroned but many more were found, so Florida's total now stands at 146 - the most for any state. The best evidence that a bit of effort can result in finding new champion trees, no matter where you live, is found in the small state of Maryland. Back in 1940 Maryland's big-tree program was already 15 years old when AMERICAN FORESTS created the National Register. Not surprisingly, a lot of Maryland trees were national champions that year. From a high of 25 (then one-third of the total), Maryland's royal family gradually declined as people around the country joined the search for big trees. But this year, thanks to the hard work of the Maryland Forest, Park, and Wildlife Service, Maryland has made a comeback, with a net increase in champions second only to Florida. From a low of five champions in 1994, the Old Line State is now up to 18, including the new American beech, rock elm, and white basswood basswood: see linden. basswood Any of certain species of linden common to North America. The name refers especially to Tilia americana, found in a vast area of eastern North America but centred in the Great Lakes region, and to T. caroliniana and T. . Besides Florida and Maryland, 24 other states have new champions, including Texas (18), Arizona (14), and Tennessee (11). Texas and Arizona have an advantage with their monopoly on a number of desert species. About one-fourth of the newly crowned in both states took their title by default since there was no previous champion. Arizona Big Tree State Coordinator Robert Zahner and Joe Ideker from Texas both accounted for six of the new champions in their respective states. Tennessee's large number of rookie big trees are credited mostly to Will Blozan, a forestry technician at Great Smoky Mountains National Park, where in the last two years he found 12 new champions (some on the North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. side), including the far-from-obscure yellow buckeye, eastern hemlock eastern hemlock cicutamaculata. , and red maple. The location is not surprising since the Smokies contain some of the largest tracts of old-growth forest in the East. Two other states should be noted for their new champions because they formerly had none. Montana debuted with a co-champion western latch, while Alaska now lays claim to both co-champion Alaska birches as well as the biggest Kenai birch. Four states still have no champions, but they either have low tree diversity (Wyoming and North Dakota) or are small (Massachusetts and Delaware). What you don't see in the current list of big trees are all the 1994 champions that have lost their claim to fame. Most of the has-beens were simply ousted by a bigger challenger; the rest were knocked out for reasons ranging from measuring technicalities to unnatural death unnatural death Forensic medicine A death that is '…caused by external causes–injury or poisoning… which includes death… due to intentional injury such as homicide or suicide, and death caused by unintentional injury in an . The 1994 champion swamp cottonwood (Populus heterophylla) was unmasked as an eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides), although at 502 points it is still a very big tree. The champion tamarind tamarind (tăm`ərĭnd), tropical ornamental evergreen tree (Tamarindus indica) of the family Leguminosae (pulse family), native to Africa and probably to Asia, but now widely grown in the tropics. (Tamarindus indica Tamarindus indica, n See tamarind. ) was found to be moonlighting as the champion Bahama lysiloma (Lysiloma latisiliquum), whose other common name, wild tamarind, facilitated the duplicity DUPLICITY, pleading. Duplicity of pleading consists in multiplicity of distinct matter to one and the same thing, whereunto several answers are required. Duplicity may occur in one and the same pleading. . Eleven former champions were dethroned after being remeasured under the new rule governing forked See forked version. forked - (Unix; probably after "fucked") Terminally slow, or dead. Originated when one system was slowed to a snail's pace by an inadvertent fork bomb. trees: When a tree forks below the 4 1/2-foot mark, the circumference is now taken from the largest fork only, not from the narrowest point below the fork. Actually, this "new" measuring method is a return to the old system used when the Big Tree program first began. And it makes sense. Many trees that fork close to the ground are really two or more trees that sprouted near each other and grew together. The new system also forces predominantly shrubby shrub·by adj. shrub·bi·er, shrub·bi·est 1. Consisting of, planted with, or covered with shrubs. 2. Of or resembling a shrub. species, like the common juniper and catclaw acacia, to have champions that look like a tree. Sadly, some former monarchs lost their crowns when they lost their lives. Some, like the Joshua tree in San Bernardino National Forest San Bernardino National Forest has two main divisions which are the San Bernardino Mountains on the easternmost of the Transverse Range, and the San Jacinto and Santa Rosa Mountains on the northernmost of the Peninsular Range. , California, just ran out of chlorophyll and died of natural causes. Others had a more dramatic ending. Seven more casualties from Hurricane Andrew were discovered, adding to the 10 known in 1994, including the seven-year-apple and tallowwood, which have had no replacements. A 459-point southern catalpa in Henderson County, Illinois Henderson County is a county located in the U.S. state of Illinois. As of 2000, the population is 8,213. Its county seat is Oquawka, Illinois6. Geography According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 1,023 km² (395 mi²). , was taken out by a tornado last May. Finally, and most regrettably, the champion pinckneya in Orange Springs, Florida Orange Springs is a town in Marion County, Florida, United States. Geography Orange Springs is located at (29.5058, -81.9456).GR1 Points of interest
All the current champion trees will eventually lose their crowns in some way, even the ancient western juniper. Even so, the inspiration of their carefully measured dimensions will live on in subtle but important ways in all the lives they touch. And, like good friends, most champion trees are still out there waiting to be discovered. RELATED ARTICLE: How To Nominate a Potential Champ For each nomination, we need the following information: 1. Correct name of the species or variety (only U.S. native and naturalized nat·u·ral·ize v. nat·u·ral·ized, nat·u·ral·iz·ing, nat·u·ral·iz·es v.tr. 1. To grant full citizenship to (one of foreign birth). 2. To adopt (something foreign) into general use. species are eligible). If you need help with identification, call your local Forest Service or Extension office. 2. Circumference of the tree in inches at 4 1/2 feet above the ground. If there is a fork at this point, measure the smallest circumference below the fork. If it branches below 4 1/2 feet, measure the largest fork above the branching. 3. Vertical height of the tree to the nearest foot. The most reliable tools for this purpose are an Abner hand level, a hypsometer, or a transit. Lacking such a tool, you can use a straight stick. Hold the stick at its base vertically at arm's length arm's length adj. the description of an agreement made by two parties freely and independently of each other, and without some special relationship, such as being a relative, having another deal on the side or one party having complete control of the other. , making sure its length above your hand equals the distance from your hand to your eye. Walk backward away from the tree, staying approximately level with the tree's base. Stop when the stick above your hand appears to be the same length as the tree. You should be sighting over your hand to the base of the tree and, without moving anything but your eye, sighting over the top of the stick to the top of the tree. Measure how far you are from the tree, and that measurement, in feet, is the tree's height. 4. Average diameter of the crown to the nearest foot. Measure the widest spread of the crown and the narrowest, then add them together and divide by two. 5. Location. 6. Date measured, and by whom. 7. Name and address of owner. 8. Clear photograph with date taken. 9. Description of the tree's physical condition. 10. Name and address of nominator. Send to: National Register of Big Trees, AMERICAN FORESTS, P.O. Box 2000, Washington, DC 20013. RELATED ARTICLE: MEGATREES: The Top Ten It has been over 100 million years since the giant coniferous con·i·fer n. Any of various mostly needle-leaved or scale-leaved, chiefly evergreen, cone-bearing gymnospermous trees or shrubs such as pines, spruces, and firs. forests that evolved in the Carboniferous Period began giving ground to the upstart flower-bearing species that now dominate the world's diversity of trees. Remnants of those cathedral forests persist today, however, and they still outgrow outgrow verb To change the relationship with a condition or structure by dint of ↑ age or size; while children outgrow clothing, and certain behaviors, they rarely outgrow diseases–eg, asthma their broadleafed counterparts. Of the 10 biggest champion trees in America, nine are conifers. The tone flowering tree in this elite group - a sycamore in Jeromesville, Ohio - has several forks near the ground and, with the new measuring rule, will probably lose a lot of points by the publication of the next Register. The most likely tree to then move into the Top 10 lineup will be the incense cedar, making it a sweep for the conifers. You might not expect the Top 10 list to change much over the years since, after all, the biggest trees of the biggest species should stand out. But there's a lot of forest out there, and slight size differences are hard to discern among giants, even if they stand side by side. Since the last Register in 1994 a new sugar-pine champion, 46 points bigger than its predecessor, has nudged ahead of the Port Orford cedar. The incense cedar was knocked out of the Top 10 by a Monterey cypress that beat out the former champ by a whopping 144 points. The 10 top champions are truly in a class by themselves. In the 1996 National Register of Big Trees, champions range from the diminutive roughleaf velvetseed, with 22 points, to the biggest tree in the world, the 1,300-point giant sequoia. Over 98 percent of champion trees fall below the halfway mark of 650 points. The only champions in the top half of the point spectrum are the Top 10. The top four champions are so far above the rest that they probably deserve a different botanical term like "megawood" or "gigatree." If you were to graph all the champion trees from least to most points, you would see a smooth, continuous increase up to No. 11, the incense cedar. No more than 19 points separates any of these trees from its neighbors. Even up to No. 5, the coast Douglas-fir, the biggest difference is 56 points between the sugar pine (No. 8) and the sycamore (No. 7). But to reach the final four you have to jump a gap of 141 points to get to the Sitka spruce (No. 4) and the western red-cedar (No. 3). A huge 252-point gap separates them from the runner-up coast redwood. Finally, you have to add another 117 points to arrive at No. 1, the champion-of-champions giant sequoia. Who says the Carboniferous Period is over? Species Girth Height Crown Points State (*denotes Co-champion) Giant sequoia 998 275 107 1300 CA Coast redwood 845 313 101 1183 CA Western redcedar(*) 761 159 45 931 WA Western redcedar(*) 732 178 54 924 WA Sitka spruce(*) 707 191 96 922 WA Sitka spruce(*) 673 206 93 902 OR Coast Douglas-fir 438 329 60 782 OR Common baldcypress 644 83 85 748 KA Sycamore 582 129 105 737 OH Sugar pine 442 232 29 681 CA Port-Orford cedar 451 219 39 680 OR Monterey cypress 522 106 111 656 CA WHIT BRONAUGH |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion