Today, there are fewer than 1,000 American chestnut trees, largely in isolated areas outside of the tree's historical range in the eastern half of the United States, along the Appalachian mountain ridge and throughout New England.
A few can be found at LERGREC, where researchers have been conducting a trial since 2013 with 15 chestnut trees—five each of the American, Chinese, and American-Chinese hybrid species developed by scientists, all planted in one long row.
"The idea was to plant American and Chinese chestnuts side by side with some of the hybrids that have been developed, and to allow them to be challenged with chestnut blight over the years," said Bryan Hed, a plant pathologist at LERGREC.
"Most of the trees have suffered dieback from disease, insects or weather and have had to be cut back and renewed," he said. "The hybrid trees are notable exceptions: Three of them are currently 17 to 21 feet in height."
Trees are renewed using sucker growth from the original rootstock.
"The American chestnut is now designated as 'functionally extinct,'" which means that although the species still technically survives, it cannot reproduce," Dobry said. "The shoots rarely grow large enough to produce nuts, and therefore, future generations."
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