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1-Page Summary1-Page Book Summary of Finding the Mother Tree

In Finding the Mother Tree, ecologist Suzanne Simard explains her decades-long research on the relationships among trees in the forests of British Columbia. Simard shows that the long-held “competition” model of forest ecology is inaccurate, and that instead the major dynamic among plant life in forests is cooperation and interdependence. She has discovered that trees in a forest are interconnected—they communicate and share resources through a complex underground network of fungi.

Simard, who grew up in a logging family in British Columbia and earned a Ph.D. in forest sciences in 1997, is a pioneer in the research of the cooperative relationships among plant life. A professor of forest...

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Finding the Mother Tree Summary Introduction: Traditional Forest Management

Simard started out working for the private logging industry, like her parents and grandparents before her, then later went to work for the Forest Service of British Columbia. The Forest Service has two goals: protecting and maintaining the health of the province’s forests, and producing timber for sale as an economic resource. At times, these goals can conflict.

The Forest Service prioritizes certain species of trees over others due to greater market demand for the wood. So they clear-cut large areas of the forest, then replant with a single, marketable species. While replanting maintains timber production, the way this is done can be unhealthy for the forests, as Simard’s research will show.

She explains that the main approach to "sustainable" forestry in recent history has been based on the notion of species competition—and eliminating that competition in order to get the best, sustained economic value.

Simard's research, however, shows that relationships between trees involve more cooperation than...

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Finding the Mother Tree Summary Simard’s Forest Service Research

When Simard left the logging industry and took her first job with the Forest Service, her supervisor was supportive of her ideas and assigned her to conduct research on what was called the “free-to-grow” policy. This policy was based on the premise that clear-cutting tracts of forest was the best way to ensure that the growth of cultivated trees would be unimpeded by competitor species.

In experiments with different tree species, Simard killed “competitor” trees with glyphosate (aka Roundup), a chemical that can target some plants while leaving others unharmed. In all her experiments, she found that killing off the “competition” had no benefit for the “free-to-grow” species. And in most cases, it was detrimental. Her findings consistently suggested that tree species growing together aid one another.

In this section, we’ll briefly describe her experimental techniques and discuss the results that show cooperation among different species of trees, as well as between trees and fungi.

(Shortform note: A 2020 article indicates that glyphosate is still being used in forest management in British...

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Finding the Mother Tree Summary Simard’s Academic Research

Simard’s research throughout the 1990s on these cooperative relationships in forests would ultimately take her from the Forest Service to academia, where she became a researcher and professor at the University of British Columbia in 2002. Along with her graduate students, she began a systematic study of the complex underground fungal networks to understand the dynamic at work and how much of the resource sharing might be intentional.

In this section, we’ll discuss Simard’s findings about Mother Trees, how this concept works to explain the relationships between trees, and the crucial importance of old-growth trees. Some of her key findings in this area are:

  • Trees don’t just transfer nutrients back and forth in a linear relationship; they’re intertwined in a complex network, with older ones (Mother Trees) sustaining younger ones.
  • Resource sharing is selective, with trees having the capability to “decide” when, with whom, and how much to share.
  • Mother Trees give preference to their own offspring.

Mother Trees

Simard came to discover that trees are intertwined via fungus in a complex resource-sharing network, with the older ones being “hubs” and the smaller ones...

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Finding the Mother Tree Summary A New Approach to Forest Management

While Simard's ideas have caught the public imagination, they’ve been resisted by the forestry establishment, as they challenge the long-held dominant paradigm of forests as spaces of competition. Simard argues that this paradigm must change if we are to have healthy forests and sustainable practices. She says it’s crucial to recognize the cooperation and interdependence that happens in forests because the long-term health of those forests depends on those relationships.

The theory that clear-cutting destroys the natural relationships between trees has been a sticking point with people who believe the idea of trees having relationships is an idealistic “hippie” notion, as Simard says her perspective has often been characterized.

In this section, we’ll discuss some of the reasons Simard’s research might be difficult for some to accept, and her overall conclusions about the implications her research has for the future of forest management.

Materialism vs. Animism

Much of the resistance to re-thinking relationships among trees is likely due to the “materialist” worldview that characterizes the Western scientific perspective. A materialist approach sees the...

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Shortform Exercise: Practice Deep Ecology

One of the major conclusions from research like Simard’s is that we need to shift the way we think about nature in order to address impending climate change. The deep ecology movement embraces changing our thought patterns in order to change our relationships with the natural world.


How does Simard’s research shift the way you think about trees, fungi, and nature in general?

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