homehome Home chatchat Notifications


How tall can a tree grow? Upper limit close to 100m

Obviously there has to be a limit to how much to a tree can grow, but what exactly influences and in term limits the height of a tree? For a long time researchers have noticed that the taller the tree, the shorter its leaves. Recently, a team of scientists found that there has to be […]

Tibi Puiu
February 8, 2013 @ 3:49 pm

share Share

The tallest tree in the world, called Hyperion, has a height of 115.11m and is located in Redwood, California.

The tallest tree in the world, called Hyperion, has a height of 115.61m and is located in Redwoods, California.

Obviously there has to be a limit to how much to a tree can grow, but what exactly influences and in term limits the height of a tree? For a long time researchers have noticed that the taller the tree, the shorter its leaves. Recently, a team of scientists found that there has to be a balance between tree height and leaf size – past this point the tree lives inefficiently and thus its growth is halted.

Kaare Jensen of Harvard University and Maciej Zwieniecki of the University of California, Davis, compared features and data from 1925 tree species, including of course the tallest, with leaves ranging from a few millimetres to over 1 metre long. According to their findings, leaf size varied most in short trees.

A bit of background on why leaf size and tree height are related, first. Plants have a circulatory system through which nutrients, metabolic compounds and waste travel. Plants produce sugar in their leaves, which then gets diffused through the leaf’s network of tube-shaped cells called the phloem. When sugar circulates it gathers momentum, so the more room it has to move the higher its velocity through the stream and the faster it will reach the rest of the plant. Phloem can be found in stems, branches and tree trunks as well, only here they act as bottlenecks. So, there comes a point where if the leaves get any bigger then it would be a waste of energy.

It’s because of this limit that trees reach a height limit. Typically, tall trees reach their limit when the leaves are still small, since the sugar needs to pass through so much trunk to feed the roots.  Jensen elaborated some mathematical equations and found there’s a sort of equilibrium point where unusually large or small leaves both cease to be viable.  The range of leaf sizes narrows and at around 100 m tall, the upper limit matches the lower limit. If a tree passes this limit, then, according to the researchers’ predictions at least, the leaf ceases to become viable anymore.

Today, the tallest tree discovered so far is the Hyperion located in Redwoods, California, which measures 115.61 m, has a diameter of 4.84 m, is between 700 and 800 years old and belongs to the Sequoia sempervirens species. As an interesting fact all of the top ten tallest trees in the world are in California, and four out of the top five trees are in Redwoods.

Findings were reported in the journal Physical Review Letters.

share Share

Scientists Created a Chymeric Mouse Using Billion-Year-Old Genes That Predate Animals

A mouse was born using prehistoric genes and the results could transform regenerative medicine.

Scientists Found a 380-Million-Year-Old Trick in Velvet Worm Slime That Could Lead To Recyclable Bioplastic

Velvet worm slime could offer a solution to our plastic waste problem.

Researchers Wake Up Algae That Went Dormant Before the First Pyramids

Scientists have revived 7,000-year-old algae from Baltic Sea sediments, pushing the limits of resurrection ecology.

A Fossil So Strange Scientists Think It’s From a Completely New Form of Life

This towering mystery fossil baffled scientists for 180 Years and it just got weirder.

Your Gum Is Shedding Microplastics into Your Saliva

One gram of chewing gum can release up to 600 microplastic particles into your body.

Octopus rides the world's fastest shark and nobody knows what's going on

A giant octopus rode a mako shark. No one knows why.

Earth’s Longest Volcanic Ridge May Be an Underwater Moving Hotspot

Scientists uncover surprising evidence that the Kerguelen hotspot, responsible for the 5,000-kilometer-long Ninetyeast Ridge, exhibited significant motion.

New NASA satellite mapped the oceans like never before

We know more about our Moon and Mars than the bottom of our oceans.

Scientists Discover Cells That Defy Death and Form New Life After the Body Dies. Enter The "Third State"

Some cells reorganize into living 'bots' long after the organism perished.

Some 31 million years ago, these iguanas rafted over 5,000 miles of ocean

New research reveals an extraordinary journey across the Pacific that defies what we thought was possible.