Arnold Arboretum’s role as a living lab grows as environmental issues mount

Wednesday, January 16, 2019 - 15:00 in Biology & Nature

Andrew Groover celebrates the complexity of trees, and makes it his life’s work to unlock how they adapt to their environments. It’s knowledge that’s critical for the U.S. Forest Service research geneticist — he works in California, where concerns about climate change have grown as wildfires there have increased in frequency and intensity. A practical problem for Groover, who is a University of California, Davis, adjunct professor of plant biology, is efficient access to the variety of trees he studies. His research requires a ready supply of species diversity, a tall order without laborious travel. But in 2012 his search for the perfect resource brought him to the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University — a 281-acre living museum holding more than 2,100 woody plant species from around the world. “Trees are fascinating for biology and research, but one of the greatest challenges in this research is finding trees tractable for study,” Groover...

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