Over most of the world, parents—especially mothers—spawn babies and then watch over them, until they can fend for themselves. For some species—primarily those who create thousands of babies, such as fish—the mother deposits eggs and is gone when the offspring hatch. They’re on their own. For others, there may be a lengthy development phase, during which babies mature and learn how to survive. Human newborns require a decade or two before they are able to fend for themselves. Climax trees in a forest require even longer; a baby's dependency phase on its parents may last for several decades.
A mother tree may have numerous offspring sheltered on the forest floor beneath her, although she will hog some 97% of the sunlight, leaving a measly 3% to filter down to them. Under these low light conditions, they grow very slowly—but that's part of Nature's strategy, as they gradually prepare for full maturity. A baby tree's leaves are much larger than mom's, in order to capture as much of that wee bit of light as possible. Their trunks grow extremely slowly; creating bark that is tough and smooth, to ward off disease and insects.
Baby trees photosynthesize lots of sugar to foster their growth, but this also makes them scrumptious to herbivores. In Yellowstone National Park, elk became plentiful during the first part of the 20th century, as wolves were killed off. Aspen and other species of trees suffered, as their saplings were mostly consumed. The reintroduction of wolves in the 1960s saw a reduction in the elk herds—allowing aspen and other tree babies a better chance to mature. The Yellowstone forest and streams are much healthier now.
When mother trees die and fall, the saplings—having waited all those years—are prepared and ready to quickly respond. A race for the sun ensues. The healthiest and fastest saplings succeed, while their less-robust siblings die. As they shoot for the sky, the straightest trees do best. They are balanced and can withstand winds better. Curved trees are less strong and resilient. Trees with forked trunks are weak and may split and then be susceptible to disease. These are Nature's ways of building healthy and vigorous forests.
Another aspect of a healthy forest is the symbiosis that occurs between trees and massive underground structures of different species of fungi. The fungus can be huge—up to several thousand years old and extending over thousands of acres. They are the largest living organisms in the world. Their relationship with trees is usually a case of mutual cooperation. Fungi provide water and nutrients to trees, ward off bacteria, and filter out harmful heavy metals. In response, trees feed sugar and various other carbohydrates to the fungi.
But the exchange is not always fully equal, as the fungi may emit hormones that induce a tree's growth to their advantage. Selfish fungi may even consume up to one-third of a tree's production of sugar from photosynthesis. That said, tree-fungi interdependence is just one example of Nature's web that maintains a flourishing forest.
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