It's All About The Trees!
Aug 30, 2010; 8:40 AM ET

Contech recently joined TreeFight to help protect the whitebark pines in Greater Yellowstone. Contech has provided the verbenone that David Gonzales and his team of volunteers is using to help keep mountain pine beetles away from these valuable trees. To learn more, check out TreeFight's amazing video and David's recent blog entry with haunting photos of the devastation. These are incredible trees -- some of the largest we've seen -- and the wildflowers are stupendous.

Help America in Bloom urge Congress to reauthorize the National Small Business Tree Planting Program. The program would provide grants to state forestry agencies to contract with local nurseries, arborists, and landscapers to plant trees around retail storefronts, rental housing complexes, and community parks. The program can help provide green-collar jobs, reduce energy demand, and clean the air of harmful pollutants. During the previous program, 1991 to 1994, more than 23 million trees were planted.
Leaves, Trunk and Roots: UF Geneticists Reveal How a Tree Knows to Grow!

Countless words have been put to paper over the years in attempts to describe the beauty of a tree - including carefully crafted passages by the world's most gifted writers. But those writings pale in comparison to the intricacy of a tree's own genetic script. A team at the University of Florida's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, led by geneticist Matias Kirst, has completed a first study of how the byzantine interplay of elements within a tree's genetic code spell out different structures, such as leaves, trunk and roots. All cells in a tree have the same genetic information, whether it's in a leaf or a root. However, how that genetic information is translated into the various tree structures is based on a complex set of interactions, said Kirst, a researcher with the UF Genetics Institute.
In the English language, a silent "e" on the end of a word can affect how the vowels in the middle of the word are pronounced. Even a word's placement in a sentence can change its meaning.
Similarly, the expression of genes spelled out in one section of DNA is often regulated by a gene or multiple genes somewhere else in the genetic code. In turn, those genes moderate the activities of others --forming networks of intertwined genetic activity. In a paper that will be published in the May 4 issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the team reports the first mapping of these networks of interactions as they affect different parts of two types of cottonwood trees. While similar genetic network mapping has been done of human cells, this represents the first time that this level of understanding has been reached in the plant world. "These are relationships we could never begin to understand without advanced computer modeling techniques that are only now possible," said Arthur Berg, who contributed genetic statistical analysis to the study while at UF, and is now a professor of biostatistics at Penn State College of Medicine in Hershey.
The analysis also revealed that certain gene networks are active only within specific parts of the tree. Meanwhile, other gene networks were active throughout the tree. Knowing which genes are expressed only in some parts of the tree and which are expressed throughout the tree is key to researchers and breeders attempting to develop trees and other plants best suited for biofuel, pulp, paper and timber production, Kirst said. One of the common problems encountered by plant breeders is that breeding for one trait can have negative outcomes in other parts of the plant. For example, a florist breeding for larger flowers may find that the flowers have less scent. This is because the genes responsible for one trait, such as flower size, may have other responsibilities within the plant.
By recognizing such genes, researchers can find solutions, such as specifically targeting secondary genes active only in the desired part of the plant. The work will help develop trees that are specifically suited to being used as feedstock for cellulosic ethanol, an environmentally friendly and renewable substitute for gasoline. However, it is likely that many other plants will have similar gene networks to those discovered in the cottonwood trees - potentially leading to more sophisticated ways of improving food crops.
Donna Dawson
About Donna Dawson, Icangarden.com
As the owner/publisher of the Internet Web site, www.ICanGarden.com , Donna Dawson has received many awards and has been recognized in numerous publications. Begun in 1996, ICanGarden.com has grown to become Canada's largest Internet gardening resource site visited by thousands of gardeners daily from all over the world. In 1998 Donna began organizing and hosting gardening tours. Her custom designed garden tours, which change yearly due to repeat guests, can be seen at www.gardeningtours.com. She has also worked with Tourism agencies helping and hosting tours to their countries.
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