Chicago's NPR News Source

Chicago researches look to lengthen life of city trees

Chicago researches look to lengthen life of city trees

Researchers deposit biochar near a tree in Chicago’s Bucktown neighborhood Tuesday.

Photo courtesy of Terracom Public Relations

Researchers in Chicago are beginning a study Tuesday that they hope will extend the life of urban trees.

All those trees you see lining shady Chicago sidestreets actually have it pretty rough. Their average lifespan is less than ten years. That’s compared to fifty or sixty years for their suburban cousins.

Bryant Scharenbroch is a soil scientist with the Morton Arboretum. He said all those city roads and buildings make soil too dense.

“When you compact the soil to make it suitable for infrastructure, you’re also making it kind of a hostile environment for trees,” he said.”

So scientists are testing out biochar, a sort of super-heated charcoal made from plant matter. Ancient Amazonians were using biochar on their crops centuries ago, but its affects on trees haven’t been widely studied, said researcher Kelby Fite, with Bartlet Tree Experts.

Biochar adds nutrients into the soil, like compost, but lasts a lot longer.

“So compost may degrade in a matter of a handful of years, whereas biochar could be stable for hundreds, or even thousands of years,” Fite said.

The researchers will monitor sample trees in the Bucktown neighborhood for the next couple years.

The Latest
Lomelok, a lion cub born in 2023, had undergone an unprecedented surgery in March to alleviate mobility issues caused by a deformity in his lower spine.
Chicago is one of the deadliest cities for migrating birds, according to recent reporting in the Chicago Tribune. But now an ordinance that would make building standards more bird-friendly could pass after a years-long delay. Reset hears from two advocates about the details and the importance of Chicago as a stopover for more than 250 species of migratory birds. GUESTS: Judy Pollock, president of the Chicago Audubon Society Annette Prince, chair of Bird Friendly Chicago and director of Chicago Bird Collision Monitors
Scientists recently managed to generate a net energy gain through atomic particle fusion, a big step toward a future source of green energy. Reset learns how far we are from wide use of that energy source. GUEST: Evan Halper, Washington Post business reporter covering the energy transition
Several varieties of furry fliers are likely closer than you think. Given the rampant spread of a deadly bat disease, we’re lucky to find the critters here at all.
The International Union for the Conservation of Nature added the migrating monarch butterfly for to its “red list” of threatened species and categorized it as “endangered” — two steps from extinct.