Chile’s Ancient Alerce Trees Shelter Secret Worlds Beneath Their Roots
In Chile’s southern rainforests, the oldest trees are more than mere survivors; they tower above mist and moss. BBC Wildlife reports that alerce trees sustain extensive underground fungal communities, rendering each ancient trunk a living reservoir of resilience, memory, and ecological balance.
More Than a Forest Skyline
The great conifers of Chile’s southern rainforests have traditionally commanded respect from a distance. They shape the skyline, capture the eye, and lend the forest an ancient air. However, research highlighted by BBC Wildlife suggests that their true significance may reside beneath the trunks and roots, within the complex and enduring architecture of the soil.
A study published in Biodiversity and Conservation found that these ancient trees are hubs of hidden biodiversity. That phrase can sound technical at first. In practice, it means something simple and astonishing. The oldest alerce are not only individual monuments. They are living centers around which other forms of life gather, depend, adapt, and endure.
This is significant in Chile’s temperate rainforests of the Coastal Range, where alerce is one of the most distinctive features of the landscape. The tree is endangered and grows slowly. It can reach heights comparable to those of the Arc de Triomphe and widths similar to those of a shipping container. Some individuals have lived for over 3,600 years, with only the bristlecone pine known to surpass this longevity. At such temporal scales, the tree transcends mere scenery and becomes an inheritance.
And yet that inheritance has been cut down before. Alerce forests stretch along Chile’s coasts and into the foothills of the Andes, but their range has been reduced by half as trees were felled for timber or land was cleared for pasture. Now, climate change and other pressures deepen the worry. The point is not only that old trees are disappearing. It is that the older the tree, the more life may disappear with it.
There is a hard Latin American familiarity to that pattern. A landscape is first read for what can be extracted from it, then only later for what holds it together. Timber. Pasture. Immediate use. The trouble is that a forest like this does not reveal its full value at a glance. It keeps part of its wealth underground.

The Underground Republic of Fungi
As with many tree species, alerce forms intimate symbiotic relationships with fungi in its surrounding soil. These mycorrhizal fungi facilitate the transfer of water and nutrients to the roots and help plants manage stressors such as drought and pathogens. In exchange, the trees supply sugars that nourish underground networks responsible for carbon sequestration in the soil. This interaction constitutes a complex, enduring mutualistic relationship.
To investigate this relationship, researchers collected soil samples from beneath thirty-one alerce trees, measured each tree’s size and biomass, and compared the fungal communities present. Their findings supported a long-held conservationist hypothesis: larger, older trees are associated with greater fungal diversity than smaller, younger individuals.
Thus, age reflects not only endurance but also ecological connectivity.
The most notable example was the soil beneath Alerce Abuelo, a 2,400-year-old tree. Over 300 fungal species were identified, all unique to this individual. Adriana Correlaes, field science lead at the Society for the Protection of Underground Networks, stated: “All that diversity means resilience” (BBC Wildlife).
That sentence lands because it resists romance without draining the wonder. Resilience here is not abstract. It means a forest is better able to withstand strain. It means relationships built slowly enough that they cannot be replaced on demand. It means that one old trunk, standing where it has stood for centuries upon centuries, may be holding together a wider community than the eye can register.
The fungal richness beneath Alerce Abuelo was more than twice that of any other sample in the study. That is not a small difference. It is a warning hidden inside a finding. Not all ages in a forest are interchangeable. Not all trees perform the same ecological work. Some become vast centers of support precisely because they have remained in place for so long.

What One Lost Giant Takes with It
This is where the study becomes more than a fascinating piece of forest science. It becomes a measure of consequence. Camille Truong of the University of Melbourne, as quoted by BBC Wildlife, made the stakes unmistakable: “Not all trees are the same, and if you remove a millennial tree, the impact on all the other species is going to be bigger than if you remove a smaller one.”
This statement challenges prevailing perceptions of these forests. Conservation discussions frequently generalize trees as interchangeable units. However, this research underscores ecological hierarchy, differentiation, and the significance of age. Removing a single millennial alerce does not merely eliminate one tree but potentially destroys an underground community that has developed over millennia.
What this does is force a sharper moral and political reading of protection. Saving old-growth forest is not only about preserving beauty, but also about counting trees. It is about defending relationships that human time barely knows how to measure. The forest floor under an ancient alerce is not empty ground. It is a crowded, functioning world.
Chile’s alerce forests still rise above the rain and the slopes with that familiar grandeur. But after this research, grandeur alone feels like a too-shallow word. These trees do not merely stand. They organize life around them. They feed it. They steady it. And if they fall, what vanishes may not be just a giant of wood and bark, but an entire buried republic that had learned, over centuries, how to keep the forest alive.
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