There are times when the
best thing anyone can do is to get lost in the woods.
I don’t mean seriously, dangerously
lost. We always should know where we are in the woods, and exactly how to get out
of them.
I mean far enough into the
woods where we cannot hear, see or feel the madness of the human world. Far
enough in to concentrate on the natural world, which is quieter despite being
as busy as our own, if not busier.
As the famous Scottish-American
naturalist John Muir once said: “And into the forest I go, to lose my mind and
find my soul.”
There is much going on in
the woods, although we see or hear only a miniscule part of the activity: Leaves
rustle in a breeze. A crow squawks a warning of your presence. A dried twig
snaps under the hoof or paw of an animal that does not want to seen.
Animals signal and speak to
each other but usually their talk is heard by human ears only when they raise
alarm. Even trees and plants communicate, although we never hear them and could
not understand their language even if we did.
Most of what is going on
back here is unseen and unheard because it is happening beneath the forest
floor.
“A forest is much more than
what you see,” ecologist Suzanne Simard, a University of British Columbia
forestry professor said during a TED Talk a couple of years back.
Simard and other researchers
have found that trees communicate through microorganisms called mycorrhizal
fungi; basically a beneficial fungus. These fungi are extensions of a tree’s
root system. They form intricate networks that spread out and explore the soil,
grow into niches and send resources back and forth between trees.
Simply put, fungal networks
are a secondary root system. Simard has said hundreds of miles of fungal
network can be found under one human footstep.
They help to share among
tree communities water, carbon, nutrients, and even warn of danger, such as an
invasive insect burrowing into the bark of one or more trees.
We have barely scratched the
outer bark of the forest in terms of what it has to teach us. Scientists like
Simard continue to probe the mysterious working of the forests, uncovering
information about the importance of biodiversity, plus ideas for better forest
management and for helping to control the effects of climate change.
We unscientific types,
however, can learn much just by going into the forest to reflect. The woods
offer lessons to those who enter them with clear minds, and the patience
to absorb to what they have to teach.
One lesson is that we are
part of the natural world and should behave more like it.
For instance, forests teach
of us that we can communicate without yelling. When you look around the forest
you see no greed, no anger, dislike or envy. Any violence can be attributed
simply to getting what is needed to survive.
Also the forest teaches us
to work together instead of competing for resources. Look at ants. They work
tirelessly as a team creating their living systems. No one group does all the
work while others watch from the sidelines. All work together.
And, we should remember that
the forest is a place where the colour of your bark does not matter. Diversity
is critical to forest life, and to human life. The web of life is weakened every
time one species, no matter how different, small or insignificant, disappears.
We spend much time worrying
about larger species, such as whales and rhinos. These are important, of
course, but most important are the complex webs of organisms that include not
just animals but plants, insects, fungi and bacteria.
If a type of whale becomes
extinct, that is a tragedy with some impact on human life. If some unseen
organisms become extinct it is possible there will be a chain reaction with
major impact on our lives.
Also, concern about forests
and protecting their biodiversity seems much focussed on the tropical rain
forests.
Our temperate forests are
vital as well, and that is why we all should spend more time getting lost in
them – figuratively.
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