You may wonder sometimes, โdo trees have feelings?โ Well, according to a study, trees tend to hear, sense or feel, and they may even preserve memory. They talk to each other as well.
Trees have feelings too, they make friends and care for each other like old couples.
โThey can feel pain, [and]ย have emotions, such as fear. Trees like to stand close together and cuddle. They love the company and like to take things slow,โ โ these are just a couple of findings by Peter Wohlleben, a German researcher who devoted his work to studying trees. and author of the book The Hidden Life of Trees.
The new documentary, called โIntelligent Treesโ (see the video below), is the work of German forester, author, and tree whisperer Peter Wohlleben, and Suzanne Simard, an ecologist from the University of British Columbia.ย
After years of intense research what ecology professor Suzanne found about trees and the way they communicate is amazing and innovative. She says that what we see above the ground is half the truth and a major part of life is taking place underground.
Related: Heal Yourself With The Chi Energy of Trees According to Taoist Masters
Do Trees Have Feelings Too? Everything About Tree Friendships
In the film they explore the various ways in which trees communicate, noting that:
Trees are so much more than rows of wood waiting to be turned into furniture, buildings or firewood. They are more than organisms producing oxygen or cleaning the air for us. They are individual beings that have feelings, know friendship have a common language, and look after each other.
In theย film, Suzanne explains how trees communicate underground throughย a vast tangled web of hair-like myceliumย that interconnects their roots. โTrees donโt do well when theyโre by themselves. They really are caring for each other. Theyโre making sure theyโre a productive, healthy, vibrant, diverse community of trees.โ
Based on his research Wohlleben claims that sometimes trees are connected at the root and are deeply bonded like old couples, so much that when one tree dies, the other one dies, too. โTrees have feelings.โ says Wohlleben.
Such romantic feelings between trees might be hard to believe! Some people may think itโs a fairy tale. Because we assume that trees compete with each other for sunlight and nutrients. However, after decades of work as a forest ranger, Wohlleben observed that creating too much space between trees disconnects them from their support networks.
Related: Tree Energy: How Trees Help Us Heal
โTrees like to stand close together and cuddle. They love the company. They can feel pain, [and]ย have emotions, such as fearโ.
Wohllebenโs book is based on decades of scientific research and he emphasizes that within species, trees support each other. His recent research demonstrated that trees inform each other when attacked by insects.
โThese trees are friends,โ Wohlleben told a New York Times reporter. He claims that the thick branches of the tress point away from each other so that donโt block their buddyโs light.
And, other biologists and ecologists to support such a mutual and harmonious relationship between trees. Other studies indicate that trees can remember things like humans, count, and learn.
Some trees use their gigantic fungal network (web of hair-like mushroom roots also known as wood wide web) to receive and send messages for sharing nutrients or warn each other about the danger.
Related: A Woman Spent 14 Years Photographing Our Planetโs Oldest Trees, and Here Are The Results
As Wohlleben says in the trailer, โThere is in fact friendship among trees. They can form bonds like an old couple, where one looks after the other.โ
And on that note, Iโm pretty sure there is in fact friendship among trees and humans, too.
So, whatโs your take on this? Do you think trees have feelings and communicate? Share your thoughts in the comments!
References
Grant, R., 2018. Do trees talk to each other.ย Smithsonian Magazine,ย 180968084, pp.1-9.
Kingsland, S.E., 2018. Facts or fairy tales? Peter Wohlleben and the hidden life of trees.
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