Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future
El Malpais and El Morro Trees
Season 5 Episode 36 | 15m 57sVideo has Closed Captions
The Value of Trees and Why We Should Protect Them.
Today, Our Land Correspondent Laura Paskus talks with Eric Weaver, Natural Resources Branch Chief for El Malpais and El Morrow National Monuments. They'll discuss some special trees, including alligator junipers, but also ancient douglas firs and junipers, ponderosas and aspens - and why they matter.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future is a local public television program presented by NMPBS
Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future
El Malpais and El Morro Trees
Season 5 Episode 36 | 15m 57sVideo has Closed Captions
Today, Our Land Correspondent Laura Paskus talks with Eric Weaver, Natural Resources Branch Chief for El Malpais and El Morrow National Monuments. They'll discuss some special trees, including alligator junipers, but also ancient douglas firs and junipers, ponderosas and aspens - and why they matter.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future
Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipLAURA: Hey, good morning Eric Weaver.
How's life in Western New Mexico this morning?
ERIC: Oh, it's good.
It's still a little bit cold out this way.
LAURA: Awesome.
So, thanks everybody for joining us.
I've got Eric Weaver and he is joining us from el Malpais National Monument and I believe you also work for el Morro… is that right?
ERIC: That's correct.
LAURA: Okay, so we're gonna start.
Last year there were some news reports about alligator junipers being cut from within the monument boundaries.
Can you talk a little bit about, you know, why you think that was happening and kind of what's happened since those news reports last year?
ERIC: So, news reports came out about a year ago, however the cutting of the alligator junipers actually started occurring about two years ago.
And we've actually seen a sizable number of alligator juniper lost because of that.
What we expect that people are using that for, is for lumber.
Alligator juniper can get a pretty good price for different kind of furniture and things of that sort.
So, the way that the trees are getting cut are, kind of, not very thoughtful in the process.
They, and they pretty much, they leave the trees as pretty well scarred, where they are not going to actually be able to recover at all.
LAURA: So, aside from the fact that, you know, it's a protected area that people aren't supposed to be cutting in, why is it significant that these trees are being cut, do you think?
ERIC: Oh, well we do not have very many alligator juniper trees in our park.
It's not very common.
The, so that's one of the concerns, is that a lot of, a lot of the, a lot of our park, everything is very connected with the ecosystem.
So, when you, when you start to have a depletion of one type of tree, there's other consequences that may happen with that, because the different vegetation, kind of, will kind of rely upon that connectiveness.
And, when you live, wipe out an entire area, then you may also have further consequences with that.
LAURA: So, I'm a big fan of alligator junipers.
I love, like, when hiking in different places, when you spot one, it always feels, kind of, like a, like treat, because they're kind of special.
A little less common than the one seeded junipers, but you have lots of other really cool and interesting and important trees in the national monuments.
Can you talk about those and maybe we'll start with a particular douglas fir that you told me about… ERIC: Yeah, the douglas fir that I was talking to you about is that, it was named yoda tree, because of its appearance.
And, it's about… it died in 2014, I believe was about a 600 year old douglas fir and some of the things that came out of that, though, is that there is other trees that are in that vicinity that, were cored for dendrochronological records.
And they were actually able to get a 2,000 year denture, chronological record to, kind of, better help us understand our climatic conditions and, in particular, the researchers were studying fire regimes, which is fairly interesting for our park, because our fire regimes, because of our geology, our lava fields kind of inhibit large fires in general.
So, we may not actually, it… a lot of the trees in the park will not see fire for hundreds of years.
And, normally, when we do see a fire it's kind of, a lot of times it's just one lightning strike… caused by, like, one lightning strike.
LAURA: So, we've done a number of shows that kind of tie into tree ring data.
When it comes to things like fire regimes and drought and I'm curious, there are there other trees in the park that people are coring and studying.
ERIC: So, we've had a large number of studies that there's ongoing studies of the trees in the park, douglas firs tend to be the ones that people look at the most.
But, we have a lot of trees that are very old in the park.
Our rocky mountain juniper are also, they're four to six hundred years old, in a lot of cases, as well as our ponderosa… it can get up to 600 years.
And, some of our, actually, some of our pinons that can also get to four to six hundred years.
So, that is another concern that we have with this cutting, is that we're going to have more people start to cut down some of these older trees, that there's, it would be a very unfortunate.
And one of the things that is surprising is, that, some of the records that we're actually get are from trees that are dead and down and so a lot of people would not actually consider it that big of a deal.
Just to pick it up and use it for a fire a campfire or something like that, but it may actually be a very critical record that they're actually destroying in the process.
LAURA: So, I think when we spoke last week you mentioned some other things… like, I believe it was pygmy ponderosas and then aspen.
So, there's some unique little pockets of ecosystems there, is that right?
ERIC: Yeah, that's, el Malpais is very interesting in that it's composed of eight different lava flows that occurred from 3,000 years ago, all the way up to 10,000 to 100,000.
And, it would, if you actually include like the conservation area next to el Malpais and each of those lava flows kind of creates different characteristics to the vegetation.
And so, the Mccarty's flow and as well as the Bandera lava flow, both have pygmy douglas firs and ponderosa.
And those are just kind of, just able to grow, utilizing the water sources that are between the cracks of the lava flows, where it's kind of stored there.
And so, it's kind of a, it's a very fine balance for them, to actually be able to survive and that's why they have the pygmy nature with that.
But, we also have the aspen that grow in the park and it's at a fairly low elevation.
We're looking at 7,000 foot elevation, and in that case, it's where the aspen are kind of utilizing the water flow off of the lava fields.
And yeah, but, they're very beautiful to see.
LAURA: They, because of the contrast between the aspen trees and the lava, the blackness of the lava, kind of, I've always found as a very synthetic, very beautiful and looking at those.
So, I was out there a few weeks ago and, you know, just kind of marvel over the fact that these trees are growing on these lava fields.
And, you can see these big kind of tap roots stretching across the rocks.
Obviously these, you know, so many of them survived hundreds of years and during a time, I would imagine, when people needed that wood, you know, for building, for burning, when that was the only fuel source and a really important, you know, a really important resource to people.
And yet, they were preserved for hundreds of years.
And, you know, kind of, I'm curious what you think about what it says about our society, that we maybe don't think twice about cutting some of these ancient trees, that are so important… ERIC: Yeah, yeah… with the el Malpais, it was heavily logged all the way up to about World War II and I think that's kind of what stopped the logging from actually taking over, a lot more of our trees… there's a lot of the trees that we have out there.
We're kind of protected because of difficulty of access to that, now where, now since el Malpais is a park, as well as a recommended wilderness area.
There's a lot of protection that's put into place, to protect the trees from cutting and so hopefully we'll start to see a lot of that start to grow back over time.
The, obviously we still have to the concern over the fact that we can remain in a continuous drought and it's going to be a very rough life for the trees.
And so, and that just goes back to being concerned about the illegal cutting, is that those trees, getting those trees back may not be possible.
LAURA: Speaking of drought, one of the other big resources that the monuments have, are lava tubes and caves.
In our newsletter a few months ago, when it came out, we wrote about this really neat study from some cave ice that was harvested.
Can you talk a little bit about that study?
And, we'll put a link to it in the comments as well.
ERIC: Yes, we have several hundred lava tubes in the park and there's about 100 of those lava tubes, have some perennial ice.
We actually have the most southerly perennial ice in North America.
So, and how that, how that occurs is that the lava acts as, like, an insulation.
And so, it kind of keeps, it keeps the cold air in the cave.
We refer to this, like cold air trap, and because it also is the morphology, the shape of the cave kind of keeps it, kind of helps that to recirculate in there.
And then, we have the moisture that, that kind of kind of seeps through the lava.
And that's how the ice actually kind of stays there and you'll have… so, most of our caves are temperatures are kind of in the 30 to 40 degree temperature throughout the year.
And, and so that would, a lot of people through history, for millennia, have utilized the cave ice and that would be so within pre-contact.
They would have been using… people would have been using it for, for collecting water, because of other droughts in the past.
They would, would have needed to utilize that as a resource as well as possibly for refrigeration, for keeping holding food.
We also see that kind of historic times where people continue to do those same type of activities and one of the things that, with cave ice, is that it's a way that we can actually, just the way that we act, it's in the same way that we can actually get information from tree cores or speleothems… we can also get that information from cave ice and that… and so, so we recently did it, did some course in the cave that resulted in a publication and some additional ongoing research.
That, and some of the exciting parts to it is that it reached back in time almost… I'm sorry, I was trying to… I think it reached back about 2,000 years ago as well.
And, it gave us more information about our past climate history so that we could, kind of, kind of match, match different events that were occurring when we had different droughts.
And so, in conjunction with that, there was charcoal that we also were able to utilize, to kind of understand times when people were using the cave ice.
And so, there is a substantial connection between when people were using the cave ice and when there was drought periods.
And so, that kind of gives us more information about our history.
The one thing we are hoping to get, that we have not been able to get, is kind of more information about the great drought, that happened in the southwest thousands of years ago.
LAURA: And, there's some other interesting scientific studies that have gone on recently, are ongoing.
Can you talk about a few of those?
ERIC: So there's, one of the things that we're doing right now is, we've had issues regarding pseudomyogenic destructants, which is the fungus that causes white nose syndrome.
And so, we have been doing studies to kind of monitor the bats as well.
Ss one of the researchers that we're working with, Dianna Northa from University of New Mexico, she's a microbiologist and has been taking a look at some of the microbes that are in the cave.
And sometimes, these microbes are also on the bats themselves.
And trying to identify if there's any type of natural defense that they can actually develop… some find out, whether these microbes may have, like, a natural defense against the fungus and in addition to that, it is… she's also doing studies with actinobacteria, to see it kind of gives us a better understanding of what life is like, what the potential for life on other planets is… what that would actually look like.
LAURA: Well, Eric Weaver, thanks so much for joining me to talk about all the cool things happening at the park, above ground and below ground.
It's such a… both monuments are so cool and I love visiting both of them.
They're beautiful.
ERIC: Okay, yeah.
Stop by anytime.
LAURA: Thanks Eric.
Support for PBS provided by:
Our Land: New Mexico’s Environmental Past, Present and Future is a local public television program presented by NMPBS