Restoring the American Chestnut Tree
Burhans. B. and Hebard, F. V. National Proceedings: Forest and Conservation Nursery Associations - 2011, p. 24-25. USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Proceedings RMRS-P-68. 2012.
The American chestnut (Castanea dentata) was a dominate hardwood tree in the eastern United States. Its historic range extended from Maine south to the northern parts of Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and west to the Ohio River Valley. In 1904, an exotic Asian fungus responsible for the death of American chestnut trees was first identified at the Bronx Zoo (New York City, NY). By 1950, the fungus (Cryphonectria parasitica) had spread throughout the range of the chestnut and had functionally removed the chestnut as a canopy tree. The American Chestnut Foundation (TACF) was established in 1983 with the mission of restoring the species to our eastern woodlands to benefit our environment, wildlife, and society. TACF currently operates over 300 breeding orchards representing over 120,000 chestnut trees throughout the range of the species. TACF has begun outplanting and testing their first line of potentially blight-resistant chestnuts. In addition, TACF is developing trees resistant to ink disease, and is using biotechnology to develop blight-resistant chestnut trees and to increase efficiency of its breeding program.
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Author(s): Bryan Burhans, Fredrick V. Hebard
Publication: National Nursery Proceedings - 2011
Event:
Joint Meeting of the Southern Forest Nursery Association and Northeastern Forest and Conservation Nursery Association
2011 - Huntington, West Virginia