top

perc

HOME

Montana Campaign

About PERC

Education

Events

Private Solutions

Programs

Publications

Research

Support PERC

Email Signup

Search

RSS Feeds

line

contact

 

PERC Reports: Volume 23,
No.1, March 2005 

Greener Pastures

Send to Friend E-mail   Printer Friendly Print

Trees to the Rescue

More Greener Pastures
Presto Fresh Water
PowerPoint Activism
House Of Green
In laboratories around the country, scientists are working to alter the genetic working of trees in order to increase their ability to store carbon, absorb toxins, and resist disease. Most recently, the city of Danbury, Conn., deployed 160 Eastern cottonwood trees to clean a 35-acre site contaminated with mercury that was once used to cure pelts for a hat factory.

A University of Georgia geneticist, Richard Meagher, has engineered the trees to extract mercury from the soil, convert it to a less toxic form, and finally release it into the air. Critics claim this simply redistributes the mercury rather than removing it from the environment. Meagher agrees, but still believes the risk of human exposure will be reduced by wider distribution. He foresees using this simple and cost-effective technology in India and Bangladesh where arsenic- and mercury-tainted drinking water is creating a serious health hazard.

Researchers at Oregon State University want to improve carbon storage in tree roots, thus cutting atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide that trap heat associated with climate change. By modifying tree architecture and cell wall chemistry, scientists are working to increase the amount of carbon stored below ground.

On other fronts, trees engineered to grow faster could become valuable for plantation forests, thus reducing logging on public forests where demands for recreation are increasing. And finally, on a more aesthetic note, one forest biotechnology project is making strides in producing a disease-resistant strain of the American chestnut. This elegant tree once graced many eastern landscapes but was destroyed a half century ago by a fungus introduced from Asia.

PERC Reports:

March 2005
Summary


2008
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2007
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2006
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2005
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2004
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2003
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2002
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2001
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4
2000
  No.1  No.2  No.3  No.4

[ search all ]