Mast years: When critters eat well

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Estimated time to read:

2–3 minutes

By Steve Roark | The Winchester Sun

Many species of trees have “mast years” when their seed/fruit pro­duc­tion is extra­or­di­nar­i­ly high. And this year it looks to be Chestnut oak, whose acorns are thick on the ground right now. 

Mast refers to tree seeds that are a food source for wildlife. It comes from the Old English word “maest,” refer­ring to tree nuts that have accu­mu­lat­ed on the for­est floor. Hard mast includes all the nut trees, includ­ing oak (nine local species), hick­o­ry (four local species), wal­nut, beech, chin­quapin, and hazel­nut. Soft mast includes fleshy fruits like dog­wood, sas­safras, black­gum, blue­ber­ry, black­ber­ry, and cherry. 

The nut trees tend to have peri­od­ic bumper crop years, and when it hap­pens, a mast year is con­spic­u­ous. Several years of low to mod­er­ate seed pro­duc­tion will sud­den­ly be aug­ment­ed by a year when the trees are loaded. How tree species coör­di­nate mast years to all pro­duce heavy at once is still a mys­tery, but it’s known that trees com­mu­ni­cate with each oth­er through chem­i­cal sig­nals passed through the air or through under­ground root/fungal con­nec­tions and weath­er cues. 

You may notice that mast-con­sum­ing species such as squir­rels, jays, turkeys, grouse, deer, and bears are more vis­i­ble dur­ing mast­ing years. In poor crop years, wildlife sight­ings drop as they move away in search of food.

This all begs the ques­tion: why do trees go through years of so-so seed pro­duc­tion and then sud­den­ly
flood the mar­ket? Masting is prob­a­bly an adap­ta­tion to aid the trees in escap­ing the rav­ages of seed con­sumers. By alter­nat­ing between occa­sion­al bumper crops and the more usu­al small­er crops, trees con­serve ener­gy, enabling them in a giv­en year to pro­duce more seeds than all the seed con­sumers can eat. Squirrels and deer can eat all they want, but there will still be plen­ty of acorns on the for­est floor to sprout into oak seedlings.

A University of Tennessee wildlife pro­fes­sor once made an obser­va­tion that bumper crop years often fol­low drought-strick­en sum­mers. This may be a reac­tion to stress, where the trees think they may not sur­vive, and so try extra hard to pro­cre­ate with heavy seed production.

An inter­est­ing book to read about mast years and life in the for­est is Eastern Forests by John Kricher and Gordon Morrison.

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