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Published byNorman Spencer Modified over 9 years ago
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Background CHESTNUT STATISTICAL PROJECT
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T REE B ACKGROUND The American Chestnut Tree was once one of America’s most prominent, large, and useful trees The American Chestnut Tree grew 80 feet tall or higher and often several feet in diameter It’s strong, rot resistant wood was used for tasks such as building homes, fences, and other types of furniture It was also an integral part of the forest ecosystem; used by animals as shelter and food (especially the hardy chestnuts)
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B LIGHT H APPENS In 1904 the chestnut blight was brought over with travelers and their local plants The blight spread throughout the Appalachian woods and killed nearly 4 billion American Chestnut trees, killing wildlife and reducing the American Chestnut trees to fallen logs and giant stumps Newly grown trees contract the blight at an almost 100% rate, limiting their growth and nourishment To the right is a picture of the blight in a Petri dish
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R ESEARCH Organizations like the American Chestnut Foundation are performing extensive research in an attempt to restore the American Chestnut to it’s former prominence Through a genetic process called backcrossing, they are attempting to develop an American Chestnut that not only closely resembles the original, but that is also blight resistant
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O UR M INI P ROJECT GGoal: To find a correlation between canker size and disease susceptibility rating CCanker Size Measured by length and width of canker on 2 different parts of the tree RRating Given by a researcher with 1 being highly resistant to the blight and 5 being highly susceptible to the blight This tree would have received a rating of 4.5 or 5 due to canker size This tree would have received a rating of around a 2.5 due to the relatively small size of it’s 2 cankers This tree is being inoculated with the blight
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