Monday, January 31, 2022

Reading list - forests

I've been reading a series of books on forests, starting with a Christmas gift, "Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds & Shape Our Futures", by Merlin Sheldrake, dipping into a book on algae, re-reading sections of "Gathering Moss", by Robin Wall Kimmerer, and then two books by David George Haskell, "The Forest Unseen: A Year's Watch in Nature" and "The Songs of Trees: Stories from Nature's Great Connectors". Great books, all.

We know how lichen joins two or more organisms from different kingdoms; algae, fungi, and bacteria. Now, Haskell's books take us one step farther, showing how a tree is really a compound organism, not precisely in the same manner as the lichens, but being joined by fungi that twine around and through and inside the roots, fungi that are as essential to the trees' well-being as the trees are to the fungi. From there he goes on to show the networks that the tree, the insects, the birds, the air and rain and even us are all part of.

Worth reading, all of these. And they have answered some of my questions, and given me some more to ponder. I love new questions!

Douglas-fir, Miracle Beach.

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He estado leyendo una serie de libros en relación con los bosques, empezando con uno que fue un regalo de Navidad, sobre los hongos, "Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds & Shape Our Futures", por Merlin Sheldrake, viendo secciones de un libro sobre las algas, volviendo a leer capítulos de "Gathering Moss", por Robin Wall Kimmerer, y luego dos libros por David George Haskell, "The Forest Unseen: A Year's Watch in Nature" y "The Songs of Trees: Stories from Nature's Great Connectors". ¡Muy buenos libros, todos!

Sabemos como es que los líquenes combinan dos o más organismos de reinos distintos, o sea, las algas, los hongos, y las bacterias. Ahora, los libros de Haskell nos lleva un paso más adelante, mostrando como un árbol tambien resulta ser un organismo compuesto. No ciertamente por el mismo estilo que los líquenes, pero siendo unido a hongos que se enredan alrededor, por en medio, y hasta adentro de las raices. Estos hongos son tan esenciales a la vida del árbol como lo es el árbol mismo a los hongos. De allí sigue mostrando las redes de vida que incluyen el árbol, los insectos, los pájaros, el aire y la lluvia, e incluso hasta nosotros.

Valió la pena leer estos todos. Y han contestado algunas de mis preguntas, y han sugerido preguntas nuevas para considerar. ¡Me encantan preguntas nuevas!


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