A Moment of Science

The Cloning and Quaking Stand of Aspen


Listen Later

If you’ve seen a grove of quaking aspen, you’ll recall trees with smooth, grey-white bark fissured with black streaks and flat leaves of green and yellow that shimmer with the lightest breeze.

A forest canopy of quaking aspen is often dense where sunlight is plentiful because they’re intolerant of shade. This growing pattern allows quaking aspen to colonize large swaths of land, with individual trees of fairly uniform arrangement, size, distribution, and health quality. We call this community of trees a “stand.”

A stand of quaking aspen may account for an extensive plot or just a minor part of a larger forest, sure to crowd out conifers or shrubs that attempt to invade its space. When one aspen tree falls, often another will quickly take its place and sprout from its roots, rather than a seed. 

Aspen grow aggressively and take advantage over shade-loving plants to repopulate their own stands. While relatively few of its seeds will become established, an aspen can regenerate individual trees by shoots along its long, lateral roots. A single root system can reproduce hundreds of individual trees in this way—each one genetically identical to the parent tree. 

A group of aspens with a single root system is called a “clone.” Clones can be less than an acre or up to 100 acres in size. These single organisms become immense and live much longer than any one tree could.

Individual aspen often don’t live beyond 150 years or so; while a clone can live for generations. The Pando Clone of Utah is one prime example, having outlasted its conifer competitors for the span of many eras.

Read more

  • The bizarre life of the pyrosome
  • The sex lives of reindeer lichen
  • Trees know when something's eating them
  • Sources

    • U.S. Forest Service - How aspens grow
    • U.S. Forest Service - Aspen ecology
    • Wikipedia - Populus tremuloides
    • ...more
      View all episodesView all episodes
      Download on the App Store

      A Moment of ScienceBy Indiana Public Media

      • 4.8
      • 4.8
      • 4.8
      • 4.8
      • 4.8

      4.8

      23 ratings


      More shows like A Moment of Science

      View all
      Freakonomics Radio by Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher

      Freakonomics Radio

      32,264 Listeners

      Planet Money by NPR

      Planet Money

      30,738 Listeners

      Science Quickly by Scientific American

      Science Quickly

      1,390 Listeners

      BrainStuff by iHeartPodcasts

      BrainStuff

      1,647 Listeners

      Nature Podcast by Springer Nature Limited

      Nature Podcast

      759 Listeners

      Living Planet by DW

      Living Planet

      139 Listeners

      The Quanta Podcast by Quanta Magazine

      The Quanta Podcast

      550 Listeners

      Science Vs by Spotify Studios

      Science Vs

      12,140 Listeners

      Science Magazine Podcast by Science Magazine

      Science Magazine Podcast

      820 Listeners

      Up First from NPR by NPR

      Up First from NPR

      56,865 Listeners

      The Indicator from Planet Money by NPR

      The Indicator from Planet Money

      9,559 Listeners

      Short Wave by NPR

      Short Wave

      6,579 Listeners

      Consider This from NPR by NPR

      Consider This from NPR

      6,441 Listeners

      Everything Everywhere Daily by Gary Arndt

      Everything Everywhere Daily

      2,216 Listeners

      The Atlas Obscura Podcast by SiriusXM and Atlas Obscura

      The Atlas Obscura Podcast

      1,747 Listeners