25 December 2017

Incredible plants: giant sequoia

General Grant tree in the Grant Grove, Kings
Canyon National Park, 2014.
California is a land of superlatives, and especially so botanically. Trees are at the top of the list for California’s record breaking plants: the state is home to the world’s oldest trees (the bristlecone pines, Pinus longaeva), the world’s tallest trees (coast redwood, Sequoia sempervirens), and the world’s largest trees by volume (the giant sequoia, Sequoiadendron giganteum). Each of these record-setting trees occurs in different geographic areas and environments among California’s diverse set of geologies and climates. They are all conifers, a widespread group of gymnosperms (gymnosperms are seed-bearing, but flowerless, vascular plants).

The giant sequoia has a narrow geographic range, found solely on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada range in central California. It occurs across a fairly broad range of elevations (825-2700 m), though most populations of the species lie between about 1800 and 2100 m above sea-level (Yu et al. 2017). Upper and lower elevations of the species may be limited by low temperatures and low precipitation respectively. The coast redwood is distributed in the coast ranges from central California to southwest Oregon. It typically grows at much lower elevations than the giant sequoia and generally in close proximity to the coast with its cool and foggy maritime air.

The coast redwood is believed to be the closet living relative of the giant sequoia. Both species are classified in the conifer family Cupressaceae which includes cedars, junipers, and cypresses. Metasequoia glyptostroboides (the dawn redwood), which occurs in China and was only discovered within the last century, is a cousin to the two California redwood species. Fossil evidence suggests that redwood-like trees were formerly much more widespread in distribution across the Northern hemisphere. Sequoiadendron for example, may have been distributed in the past in North America, Europe, and New Zealand. Thus, these three redwood species might be considered relict species with greatly constricted modern distributions relative to the past. Perhaps glacial cycles (increased northern latitude ice cover implicated in the case of Metasequoia) and other factors over time have led to the range constriction of this group of conifers.

Hypothesized evolutionary relationships among giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum), coast redwoods (Sequoia sempervirens), the dawn redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides) and other Cupressaceae. Tree after Kusumi et al. 2000. 

The giant sequoia is a behemoth, estimated to be greater in volume than any other tree species in the world. The largest individuals have an imposing presence in the mixed conifer forests in which they occur. The base of the trunk in the largest individuals can often reach up to 11 m in diameter and 90 m in height (a little shorter than the coast redwood). The giant sequoia has reddish fibrous bark like the coast redwood, with deep furrows evident in older, larger trees. Old growth individuals may live several millennia.

Needles and cones in the giant sequoia and coast redwood are different enough to enable easy identification (in addition to differences in native range between the species). The giant sequoia has short pointed leaves that emerge from stems in a radial fashion, whereas most leaves on the coast redwood are pinnate sprays of leaves flattened in one plane. (An interesting exception is the leaves at the very top of a coast redwood which look quite similar to giant sequoia leaves in overall form.) Giant sequoia trees have both male and female cones on the same individual. Female (seed-bearing) cones of Sequoiadendron and Sequoia are both egg shaped and similar in morphology, but cones of the giant sequoia are about twice as large, almost the size of a chicken egg. Female cones of the giant sequoia are produced in clusters high in the foliage and bear small papery seeds a few centimeters in size.

Foliage of giant sequoia (left) and coast redwood (right). Photos from Bearskin Grove, Sequoia National Forest (2014) and Ventana Wilderness, Los Padres National Forest, Big Sur (2015).


Female cones and seedling of giant sequoia, Tuolumne Grove, Yosemite National Park, 2017.


Several giant sequoias with other conifers in the
Tuolumne Grove, 2017.
Fire is a necessary ecological disturbance for the persistence of the species. Unlike coast redwoods which can grow semi-clonally (e.g., from burs), sequoias generally only produce new individuals from seed, though new shoots can develop from injured stumps in younger trees. Mature trees are resistant to fires of low to moderate intensity which remove understory plants and favor sequoia seed germination by exposing bare soils for germination and increasing light levels reaching the forest floor. When occurring in mixed conifer species forests, sequoias are often found with sugar pines (Pinus lambertiana) and white firs (Abies concolor). Lack of fire will promote white fir relative to giant sequoias.

Controlled fire is used today by some agencies to manage sequoia groves. Reducing woody biomass in the forest understory is a means of protecting groves from more intense large scale-fires made more likely by decades of fire suppression practices in the western US. 

With its immense size, the giant sequoia was a prized timber species in the 19th century. Many of the 67 groves of living giant sequoia are currently protected on state or federal land. This includes three groves in Yosemite National Park and many groves in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks. Additional groves within Sequoia National Forest were protected from commercial logging (which occurred up until the 1980s) with the creation of Sequoia National Monument in 2000. The groves vary greatly in size, old-growth forest extent, and logging history. The smallest of all groves is also the most northerly grove in Placer County west of Lake Tahoe. It has only 6 trees.

Panorama of the Muir Grove in Sequoia National Park, 2014. The sequoias are clustered at top center and can be distinguished from other conifer species by their slightly yellow-brown color and bushy crowns.

Sequoias are vulnerable to root disturbance and intense fires. Climate change might also present challenges to the species persistence, possibly through increasing drought impacts in the future in the Sierra. For instance, recent work by Yu et al. (2017) suggests that drought impacts may be more severe in sequoia groves than in nearby forests dominated by other tree species. However, Willard (2000) suggests that groves have been doing well recently, with many recovering from historic logging and some expanding in size.

References

Baldwin BG, Goldman DH, Keil DJ, Patterson R, Rosatti TJ, Wilken DH. 2012. The Jepson Manual. Vascular Plants of California. 2nd ed. University of California Press, Berkeley, CA.

Eckenwalder JE. 2009. Conifers of the World. The Complete Reference. Timber Press, Portland OR.

Kusumi J, Tsumura Y, Yoshimaru H, Tachida H. 2000. Phylogenetic relationships in Taxodiaceae and Cupressaceae sensu stricto based on matK gene, chlL gene, trnL-trnF IGS region, and trnL intron sequences. American Journal of Botany 87:1480-1488.

Su Y et al. 2017. Emerging stress and relative resiliency of Giant Sequoia groves experiencing multi-year dry periods in a warming climate. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences 122:3063-3075. Preprint link.

Weatherspoon CP. 1986. Silvics of giant sequoia. In Weatherspoon et al. Proceedings of the workshop on management of giant sequoia; May 24-25, 1985; Reedley, California. USFS General Technical Report PSW-95.

Willard D. 2000. A Guide to the Sequoia Groves of California.Yosemite Association, Yosemite National Park, CA.

Sequoias in the Muir Grove, 2014.

Cluster of female cones (left) and close-up of trunk (right), Tuolumne Grove, 2017.