Connecticut news

US Endowment for Forestry and Communities Announces Partnership

Concerns over the role of pests in potentially transforming our landscape and even threatening the restoration of the American chestnut have never been greater. Those involved in breeding for blight resistance are concerned not just about cryphonectria parasitica (chestnut blight) but also about breeding for resistance to other exotic pathogens such as Phytophthora cinnamomi and pests such as the Asian Longhorned Beetle as well as others known and yet to come.

I was therefore interested to see a news release by the US Endowment for Forests and Communities describing a new broad-based initiative specifically targeted to the American chestnut. In their words …

The partnership is designed to assess the potential to develop and deploy scientifically-sound, socially acceptable and rigorously vetted/regulated approaches that might see the benefits of biotechnology used in the fight against the ever increasing list of alien pests and diseases that threaten North America's forests.



The partnership ? “Advancing Forest Health through Biotechnology” — is a three-year perhaps $10M effort that will use the American chestnut as the test tree. The Endowment has pledged $1M to the effort and will serve on the Steering Committee along with other core funding partners, the USDA Forest Service and Duke Energy.

The US Endowment for Forests and Communities is affiliated with the Forest Health Initiative which supports protecting trees (the American chestnut) through the pathways including: breeding, genomics and transformation. The Forest Health Initiative has an affiliation with The American Chestnut Foundation – though I am not familiar with all the terms of that association.

This is very exciting news! Several years ago Dr. Chuck Maynard presented his transgenic chestnut work to the CT Chapter and we found his work to be exciting, optimistic, and positively brimming with potential. Pragmatically, it appears this approach is still in the formative and proving phase, though success is eagerly anticipated.

Restoration is a complex problem solving not just today's ecological challenges but also those of tomorrow. Peer reviewed and accepted solutions provides great hope for success. Funding a balanced solution – the pathways previously mentioned – plus significant planning for the restoration phase, should provide the best path for success.

My affiliation with the chestnut restoration community gives me great confidence that we have the intellectual power to find and implement the right solutions. Scientists such as Fred Hebard, Kim Stiener, Chuck Maynard (and many others) have devoted their careers to the research of solutiona to the decimation caused by pathogens such as the Chestnut blight. Leveraging the strengths of these collective individuals, and funding their vision will ensure that we are the eventual beneficiaries.

This partnership with the USFA, Duke Energy and US Endowment is just another welcome milestone in supporting the type of scientific efforts needed to move us to the restoration phase with a true hope for success.

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A wild American chestnut is always a sight to see, especially one with a healed canker.

Have you found any wild American chestnuts?

#americanchestnut #nature #envrionment #blight #explore
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Quite a few around us in CT, but none that big. I assume what we are seeing are stump sprouts.

God, I hope it has developed genetic resistance and passes that on. I want to live in a world full of American Chestnuts and Elms again

At my art residency in WV there was an American chestnut tree in their yard! I cried! I collected some of the seed pods

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Every season tells a story… 🌰

Maybe it’s a chipmunk on the run, a chestnut sprouting new life, or snow dusting winter leaves. However you see it, we want you to capture it. The 2026 American Chestnut Photo Contest is open!

📸 Submit up to 5 photos
🏆 Chance to win TACF gear + a feature in Chestnut magazine + Seed Level membership
🗓️ Entries due December 31, 2026

Your next hike could lead to the winning shot.

Submit photos to: gro.fcat@snoitacinummoc

Visit the following link for more information: tacf.org/2026-photo-contest/

#naturelovers #americanchestnut #photographycontest #exploremore #photography
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Every season tells a story… 🌰Maybe it’s a chipmunk on the run, a chestnut sprouting new life, or snow dusting winter leaves. However you see it, we want you to capture it. The 2026 American Chestnut Photo Contest is open!📸 Submit up to 5 photos🏆 Chance to win TACF gear + a feature in Chestnut magazine + Seed Level   membership🗓️ Entries due December 31, 2026Your next hike could lead to the winning shot.Submit photos to: communications@tacf.orgVisit the following link for more information: https://tacf.org/2026-photo-contest/#naturelovers #americanchestnut #photographycontest #exploremore #photographyImage attachment

Visit www.williamsondailynews.com/opinion/appalachian-bluebird-when-the-forests-were-brought-down-the-m... to explore this article on the historic logging industry, the significance of American chestnuts within it, and the methods used to transport logs from the mountains.

#americanchestnut #news #logging #history #explore
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Visit https://www.williamsondailynews.com/opinion/appalachian-bluebird-when-the-forests-were-brought-down-the-mountain/article_2f171b21-7152-50ab-9767-4c52aff55471.html to explore this article on the historic logging industry, the significance of American chestnuts within it, and the methods used to transport logs from the mountains. #americanchestnut #news #logging #history #explore

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Raping the earth really noble 🤬

Check out this reel by the Seed Crown Company! They are testing whether Seed Crown shelters can help with direct seeding chestnuts in a forest setting.

In this video, Scott Laseter heads out to a montane longleaf restoration area on Georgia's Pine Mountain for the first tally of a direct seeding trial for American chestnuts.
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Check out this informative short video by the Georgia Chapter! It shows you how we process catkins and store pollen for chestnut breeding. ... See MoreSee Less

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