Last updated: July 25, 2022
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Into the Canopy - The 2014 Muir Woods BioBlitz

Save The Redwoods League
One of the living things these scientists were particularly interested in finding is lichen. They counted and categorized the different species of lichens in the forest canopy. Lichen is a partnership. It is a symbiotic relationship between different kinds of fungi and algae. Fungi provide the shape and structure. Algae gives lichen its distinct colors. It also provides nutrients for the fungi through photosynthesis. This partnership can exist in many different ways. There are approximately 3,600 known species of lichen in North America. The work of scientists like Sillett, Antonie, Næsborg, and Williams play a role in increasing what we know about lichens.
Dr. Stephen Sillett and botanist Marie Antonie have climbed countless redwood trees in California. They are leading experts in climbing and studying the world's tallest living things. Stephen Sillett always had a fascination with redwoods and other tall trees. Marie Antoine’s first love was lichen. Reese Næsborg also has extensive experience in studying lichens and epiphytes (organisms that grow on the surface of a plant). Cameron Williams has studied forest canopies around the world.

Tonatiuh Trejo-Cantwell and Save the Redwoods League
At noon the climbing began. Stephen Sillett and Marie Antoine ascended a 249 foot redwood tree. Cameron Williams and Reese Næsborg climbed a 230 feet tall Douglas fir. Williams and Næsborg wrote, “The study trees were among the largest in the grove, and were probably at least several hundred years old… We began our survey at the top and worked our way down.”
Marie Antoine noticed some interesting qualities of the redwood tree right away. She said, “For the first 50 meters there was nothing growing on the tree {redwood} at all. It was just bare bark.” Williams and Næsborg later described this in their paper. They wrote “This unusual phenomenon is perhaps explainable by the combination of hostile bark chemistry, low light, and relatively dry bark of the coast redwood. Microclimate is particularly suspect here, as this coast redwood stands closely surrounded by other tall trees in the middle of the dense “Cathedral Grove”. The main trunks of coast redwoods generally support relatively sparse epiphyte communities, especially below the crown...”
Coast redwood trees have a chemical called tannic acid. This is what gives redwoods their red color, and it also makes them resistant to fire, insects and disease. This bark chemistry is one factor that makes the redwood truck less hospital to supporting epiphytes.

Save the Redwoods League

Save the Redwoods League

Save the Redwoods League
In November 2014 Reese Næsborg and Cameron Williams came back to Muir Woods. They conducted more expansive research on the different kinds of lichens in the monument. They found a total of 103 species of lichen at Muir Woods. In their article, Lichen Diversity in Muir Woods National Monument, they wrote, “The greatest lichen richness was found on California buckeye, followed by tan oak and Douglas fir, but dead redwood foliage and cones retained by the tree for several years also supported many species.”
Lichens can tell us a lot about the forest ecosystem. Lichens are essential food sources for animals and nest building materials for birds. They can also protect many trees from harsh elements when they coat their bark. Lichens are also indicators of air quality. Some lichens will thrive in poor air quality, while others can not survive unless the air is clean. Studying the lichens in a specific area can give scientists clues on the air quality status. Williams and Næsborg wrote, “The lichen community occupying the forest interior was dominated by species considered either sensitive or somewhat sensitive to air pollution, whereas several pollution tolerant species were discovered in the vicinity of the parking area. However, these pollution tolerant species were not abundant, and pollution sensitive species were also encountered near the parking area.”

Save the Redwoods League
In 2014 scientists studied the biodiversity and health of the forest. No one had climbed the trees at Muir Woods before. When the scientists traveled up to the canopy of the redwood forest, they were transported to an entirely different habitat. They were surrounded by unique microclimates and species.
Reese Næsborg said of the experience, “We have climbed a lot of trees, but this is absolutely special and a very beautiful place.”