A fungus wiped out 3.5 billion American chestnut trees. Scientists believe genetically-engineered blight-resistant trees will bring them back

Authored by berkshireeagle.com and submitted by dolphins3
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The application of genetic engineering to food crops is controversial, and rightly so. Critics worry that changing genetics may have harmful, unanticipated effects on food safety and the environment. In fact, this has sometimes been the case.

Almost as soon as it became possible, genetic engineering was co-opted by chemical companies to create herbicide-resistant strains of crops — such as corn or soybeans — so that weeds could be controlled by indiscriminate applications of toxins, such as glyphosate. The resulting orgy of chemical usage has resulted in widespread contamination of soils and water supplies, as well as contaminated foods becoming a routine feature at local supermarkets.

So there are real reasons for caution. It’s important to remember, however, that genetic engineering has precisely the same goal as conventional plant breeding, which has been transforming the genetic material of plants for millennia. The difference is that conventional plant breeding, which depends on moving pollen from one plant to the flower of another in the hope that the offspring will include the desirable traits of both parents, is hugely inefficient. It’s like pulling the handle on a biological slot machine. Getting the exact genetic combination you want from a cross of two plants may require hundreds or even thousands of crosses. That’s possible when you are working with a fast-maturing annual crop. However, it makes breeding trees a very protracted process.

It has been almost a century, for instance, that plant breeders have been working on the American chestnut tree. This was once a foundation of the forest ecosystem in the eastern United States. The American chestnut was hugely common, commprising an estimated 25 percent of all our hardwood trees. Its abundant crops of nuts were an important food source for wildlife and human inhabitants too. Growing to towering heights with trunks 10 feet or more in diameter, the American chestnut produced a light but strong and rot-resistant timber which was an important source of income throughout the tree’s range. With the accidental introduction of the chestnut blight — a fungus from Asia — in the early 20-century, the impact was severe, resulting in the death of virtually every American chestnut tree, an estimated 3.5 billion in all.

By the 1920s, plant breeders were already engaged in crossing surviving American chestnuts with Asian relatives that had a natural resistance to the blight. The goal was to produce a tree with the physical characteristics of the American species but the resistance of the lower-growing Asian ones. However, after hundreds of thousands of crosses over the course of a century, success has eluded these efforts. Apparently, the genetic coding that endows the Asian trees with blight resistance is linked with genetic material that gives them their low and spreading pattern of growth.

That’s why in 1989 the American Chestnut Foundation, an organization dedicated to returning this tree to the forest, approached scientists at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry with a request that its scientists apply the techniques of genetic engineering to this species. In response, the genetic engineers were able to insert into the American chestnut genome a single gene, taken from wheat, which did endow the tree with blight resistance; the genetically engineered trees still contract the blight, but it is no longer harmful to them.

This success began the long process of getting the genetically-engineered tree approved by government agencies for transplanting into the wild. In the course of this process researchers have studied everything, from the potential impact of the GMO trees on pollinators and other insects that may feed on them, to the possible impact of the blight-resistant tree roots on mycorrhizal fungi in the surrounding soil. No problems have emerged, and the trees have been approved for release, perhaps as soon as this summer.

Wild American chestnuts have continued to send up shoots from their stumps, occasionally bearing flowers before the blight cuts them down again. By interbreeding these with the genetically engineered specimens, it is planned to create a genetically diverse but blight-resistant population that can, over time, return this keystone species to our woods.

The importance of this project is more than just the restoration of one species. In an era when introduced pests and diseases are attacking so many native trees, genetic engineering offers an efficient and effective response that, in my view, we cannot afford to reject. In the process, we can redeem a technology that has so often been used for environmental harm.

LummoxJR on February 27th, 2023 at 00:57 UTC »

This makesme very happy to hear. I'm very pro-tree.

ArchitectNebulous on February 27th, 2023 at 00:27 UTC »

Iirc the chestnut trees were also fantastic at carbon requisition.

USS_Hornet on February 26th, 2023 at 22:59 UTC »

There’s an experimental forest near me with resistant trees. The stand is marked by the forest service but since I’ve never seen a chestnut tree (that I know of) I couldn’t tell which ones they were. The stand has a wide mix of normal southern Appalachian trees of a wide range of ages too so I don’t know if they were the smaller or bigger trees.