READING PASSAGE-3
You should spend about 20 minutes on
Questions 27-40,
which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Review:
The Hidden Life of Trees
by Peter Wohlleben
That so many copies of Peter Wohlleben’s book
The Hidden Life of Trees
have been
sold is no surprise. Life in the urban jungle can be overwhelming, and many of us
long to escape by seeing more natural environments. We hope an encounter with
nature might make us feel more ‘alive’. Would we use this same term to describe
nature itself, though? Forests and the trees that form them are commonly
perceived as objects lacking awareness, like rocks or stones. But here, Wohlleben
would beg to differ. From his observations, he has concluded that they are
conscious in a way we do not fully understand.
In recent decades, a number of writers have investigated our planet’s flora.
The
Cabaret of Plants
by Richard Mabey and
What a Planet Knows
by Daniel
Chamovitz, for example, have done much to reformulate our views about the
green world. Central to many of these books is a serious message about
sustainability, and
The Hidden Life Trees
is no exception. What sets it apart is its
approach to description: at the start Wohlleben announces that ‘ When you know
the trees … have memories and that tree parents live together with their children,
then you can no longer just chop them down.’ Not everyone will be comfortable
with this kind of anthropomorphism.
Nevertheless, Wohlleben’s experience of working in a beech forest in the Eifel
mountains of Germany may put him in a better position than many to write a book
about trees. In the introduction, he explains that he started out as a state-
employed forester, taking care of trees purely for industrial reasons. The
straighter they were, the more high-quality logs could be sawn. But after a while
he began to appreciate trees for more than just their commercial worth. He gives
some of the credit for this realisation to the tourists that would come to the forest,
who were more enchanted by bent, crooked, which did not conform to the straight
ideal.
An anectode that stands out is Wohlleben’s encounter with ‘the gnarled remains of
an enormous tree stump’ in the Eifel forest. More than anything else, it was this
encounter that prompted him to look further into the hidden behaviour of trees.
To his surprise, after scraping at the outside layer of bark covering the stump, he
discovered a green layer underneath. This was chlorophyll, the pigment normally
produced by living trees. Wohlleben realised that the only way the stump could
still be alive was if the surrounding beeches were providing it with a sugar
solution through their own roots.
Wohlleben is not the first person to claim that trees are cooperative. In the 1990s,
Dr Suzanne Simard realised that fir and birch trees were supplying each other
with carbon. Simard’s findings made complete sense to Wohlleben, who believes
that this kind of nutrient exchange between neighbours is typical of a healthy
forest. Wohlleben also had the opportunity to deepen his understanding of tree
biology when researchers from Aachen University set up investigative
programmes in his beech forest. Discussions with them reinforced his beliefs
about the way trees thrived, and Wohlleben eventually found himself strongly
opposed to some traditional forestry practices. He finally succeeded in persuading
local villagers that the forest should be allowed to return to a natural state: this
involved banning the use of machinery for logging, and giving up on pesticides for
a start. Since then, Wohllebenhas been noting how his beech forest has developed,
and his observations formed the foundation for the book. Humour and
straightforward narrative make it instantly appealing to readers without a science
background – elements that have successfully been translated into over a dozen
languages. Those that
do
have scientific training, however, will be more
demanding. Critics of Wohlleben point out that proper academic studies need to
be done to prove all his claims are factually accurate. This seems a fair point. What
the book will certainly do is transform nature lovers’ experiences of a forest work.
Once you know what is happening below ground, you can’t help but marvel at the
complex life of trees. Will it transform the way we produce timber for the
manufacturing industry? As large corporations tend to focus on immediate profits,
they are hardly likely to adopt the longer-term practices that Wohlleben
recommends.
One of these is allowing trees to grow nearer to each other. This is the opposite of
what happens in many state-owned forests, where foresters deliberately space
out trees so they can get more sunlight and grow faster. But Wohlleben claims this
spacing prevents vital root interaction, and so lowers resistance to drought. Older,
established trees, he explains, draw up moisture through their deep roots and
provide this to juvenile trees is also given attention. For instance, when pines
require more nitrogen, the fungi growing at their base release a poison into the
soil. This poison kills many minute organisms, which release nitrogen as they die,
and this is absorbed by the trees’ roots. In return, the fungi receive
photosynthesised sugar from pines. Then Wohlleben explores the way trees
employ scent, giving the example of acacia trees in sub-Saharan Africa. When
giraffes begin feeding on an acacia’s leaves, the tree emits ethylene gas as a
warning to neighbouring acacias. These they pump tannins into their leaves –
substances toxic to giraffes. More controversial is Wohlleben’s suggestion that
trees feel pain. Although scientific research has now established that if branches
are broken off or the trunk is hit with an axe, a tree will emit electrical signals
from the site of the wound, the application of the concept of ‘pain’ might be an
instance where readers are unconvinced
.
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