Researches confirm world’s oldest tree, Sweden

The world’s oldest known living tree, a conifer that first took root at the end of the last Ice Age, has been discovered in Sweden, according to an online National Geographic report.

The visible portion of the (4 m ‘Christmas tree’ isn’t ancient, but its root system has been growing for 9,550 years, according to a research team led by Leif Kullman, professor at Umeå University’s Department of Ecology and Environmental Science in Sweden.
Discovered in 2004, the lone Norway spruce – of the species traditionally used to decorate European homes during Christmas – represents the planet’s longest-lived identified plant, Kullman said.
The researchers found the shrubby mountain survivor at an altitude of 910 m in Dalarna Province.

The tree’s incredible longevity is largely due to its ability to clone itself, Kullman said. The spruce’s stems or trunks have a lifespan of around 600 years, “but as soon as a stem dies, a new one emerges from the same root stock,” Kullman explained. “So the tree has a very long life expectancy.” Bristlecone pines in the western United States are generally recognized as the world’s oldest continuously standing trees, the National Geographic report continued. The most ancient recorded, from California’s White Mountains, is dated to around 5,000 years ago. Bristlecone pines are aged by counting tree rings, which form annually within their trunks. But in the case of the Norway spruce, ancient remnants of its roots were radiocarbon dated. The study team also identified other ancient spruces in Sweden that were between 5,000 and 6,000 years old.