Joshua Wright says a yellow cedar tree he photographed last year was “incredible,” the largest he’d ever seen in a decade of hiking around Vancouver Island.

The monumental cedar stood in what was one of the few intact or nearly intact old-growth valleys left on the island, says Wright, an advocate who also recorded the sounds of marbled murrelet birds — a threatened species under federal law — within the same forest.

Wright measured the cedar’s diameter at 2.79 metres, a size that should have ensured protection for the tree, along with a one-hectare logging buffer under provincial law.

But when he returned to the area south of Gold River in June, Wright says the tree had been felled as part of a logging operation approved by the province.

  • Pyr@lemmy.ca
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    4 days ago

    Why would an oxygen rich Environment help trees grow bigger? They consume CO2 and exhale Oxygen. If anything they should grow better in a CO2 rich Environment.

    Prehistoric insects were larger because of an oxygen rich Environment, but I don’t think that applies to plants.

    • CompactFlax@discuss.tchncs.de
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      4 days ago

      Truthfully I don’t remember what the reason was; it was multiple variables, but I don’t know what the variables were.

      In any case, there’s vanishingly few of these trees remaining.