Deutsche Welle, 2 April 2014
Diana
Beresford-Kroeger is passionate about protecting trees - and growing them. The
botanist has nurtured her own research forest in Canada, and believes trees
remain the key to combating climate change.
There's a
blanket of fresh snow on the ground on a gloriously sunny, although
below-freezing, day at 's rural retreat just outside of Ottawa. The research
scientist enthusiastically starts her tour of the forested property.
For
Beresford-Kroeger, this no ordinary forest - it's more of a tree laboratory, a
life's work. She has spent years planting hundreds of trees here, nurturing
virtually all of her charges from seed.
Beresford-Kroeger
first fell in love with trees as a student of botany in her native Ireland. But
it wasn't until after she'd emigrated to Canada that she came up with the idea
of growing her own forest as a "research garden."
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Welcome to the botanist's laboratory |
She says
that in Canada, "nobody was planting all these rare, wonderful, fabulous
trees." We crunch through fresh snow as the tour continues.
For her,
these majestic giants are complicated beings that don't get the respect they
deserve: "The tree has a genome which is much more complex than ours - the
tree is a factory for the manufacture of food which feeds us and all of
nature."
Noah's ark
Preserving
biodiversity and tending endangered species are essential to
Beresford-Kroeger's mission. She has traveled the globe accumulating different
plant varieties to add to her extensive nursery. She thinks the crucial role
trees play in the planet's well-being is underestimated.
"One
species of tree is responsible for 40 types of insects," Beresford-Kroeger
points out.
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Beresford-Kroeger emphasizes the many healing properties of trees |
And there
are also benefits for humans, she explains as she walks, pointing out plant
species that she says can be used to treat Parkinson's disease and cancer. We
come to a 6-meter-tall (20-foot-tall) cucumber tree, which was traditionally
used to treat malaria.
"It's
absolutely glorious - it has a quinine compound used against malaria," she
says. But there are only one or two of those trees left in Canada, she
continues.
Forests to
fight climate change
Beresford-Kroeger
also considers trees to be among the most important factors in combating
climate change.
John Stone,
a leading writer with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, points out
that many other factors come into play. The burning of fossil fuels to produce
energy, he says, represents the bigger part of the problem.
"Clearly
we can't carry on at the present rate, because temperatures will rise," he
says. "We are going to have to wean ourselves off our addiction to fossil
fuels. We are going to have to go to renewable energy," Stone says in
response to the problem of climate change.
Beresford-Kroeger
sees the ancient boreal forest as playing a particularly important role in
climate. Known in Russian as taiga, the boreal forest rings the northern part
of the globe from Canada and Alaska through Russia and into Scandinavia. The
pines, spruces, birches and larches of the boreal forest make up 29 percent of
the world's forest cover, and represent the Earth's largest terrestrial biome.
Beresford-Kroeger
has made it part of her mission to call for special designation of boreal
forest by the United Nations heritage body, UNESCO.
"That
forest is the last great forest left on the planet," Beresford-Kroeger
says. "It is the forest that maintains the greatest amount of oxygenation
and water vapor on the planet. That forest manages the great ocean currents.
Those forests actually rule the weather patterns."
Threatened
by tar sands
But some
areas of expansive boreal forest are being cut down. Swathes of Siberia's trees
have been cleared for lumber, and currently Canadian forests are being leveled
to make way for tar sands or oil development. In Canada, only 8 percent of the
boreal forest is protected.
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Self-professed tree hugger Beresford- Kroeger thinks trees can solve climate change |
Canadian
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has argued that tar sands development will help
fulfill the demand for fuel, provide energy security and create jobs.
But
Beresford-Kroeger notes that ancient forests have evolved over hundreds of
years, and are impossible to replace. The massive acreage involved in tar sands
development should not be underestimated, she adds. Such land amounts to
"three times the size of Ireland."
Beresford-Kroeger
remains convinced that protecting and expanding forests is the answer to
tackling climate change. "Have a moratorium on [cutting down] the boreal
forest," she says. "Expand the forests that are here. We need to
recoup this country."
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