Community Corner
Messenger Woods Trees Named Illinois Big Tree Champions
The jack pine tree and black maple tree in the preserve are the biggest known specimens of those two tree species in the state.
HOMER GLEN, IL — Two trees in the Messenger Woods Nature Preserve in Homer Glen were added to the Illinois Big Tree Champions list earlier this year, according to a release from the Forest Preserve District of Will County.
The jack pine tree and black maple tree are the biggest known specimens of those two tree species in the state.
More information on the trees and all the other champion trees in Illinois can be found on an interactive digital map created by the University of Illinois Extension, the preserve said.
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Christopher Evans, a University of Illinois Extension forestry and research specialist in the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, said Will County’s champion tree species are more likely to grow in the northern part of the state.
“Jack pine is a fairly rare species in Illinois that is more common further north,” he said in a release. “Black maple is also a northern species whose ranges dip into northern Illinois. It, along with sugar maple, are the classic hard maple species that are used for maple syrup production and are valuable for timber.”
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In the past, the big tree list was a paper document that was not as easy to update, but that has changed, Evans said.
“We have it set up now as a website instead of a document so it can be constantly updated anytime a new tree is nominated,” he said. “We recently went through a big review of the list and remeasured most of the current state champions on the list just to make sure everything was up-to-date. We have also had a lot of interest from the public in the program lately, so I’ve been getting a lot of new nominations.”
The most popular species nominated are the ones that are easy to identify and get big, Evans said.
“So, we get a lot of white oaks nominated, though they generally do not score high enough to dethrone the current state champion [of that species],” he said in a release. “Bur oaks, sweetgum, and tulip poplar are also common species to be nominated.”
The list is a way to acknowledge the state’s biggest trees and generate interest in its forests, Evans said.
“It brings notoriety to the native trees of Illinois and the forested ecosystems,” he said. “Big trees are just so fascinating, and they draw people’s attention that it is a great way to start to learn more about trees.”
According to the Extension Service, the register was first established in 1962.
Will County has had trees on the list in the past.
“Will County was on the list with a box elder from Elwood in 1986 and a downy hawthorn from Frankfort in 1995, but both trees were replaced by larger specimens in other counties,” Evans said in a release.
Trees come off the list when they are damaged or die. That’s why Evans said the university is planning to remeasure all the champions every 10 years to make sure the trees’ scores haven’t been reduced.
“If a state champion tree dies, we will remove it from the list and then the largest contender that we have on file will be the new state champion or, if there are no contenders, that species will be vacant on the list until a new champion is nominated,” he said.
Celebrating trees is more important than ever, Evans added, especially with the climate heating up and global warming becoming more of a reality.
“Trees, and forested ecosystems, are very good at sequestering carbon and mitigating heat island effects in cities so they are a vital part of the efforts to deal with climate change,” he said in a release. “In addition, most of Illinois’ biodiversity, including plants and animal species, utilize our forests, so we know climate change is stressing our native species and that will only increase. Healthy forests with a diverse array of native tree species are important to maintain adequate habitat for our native flora and fauna so they can better adapt to the changing climate.”
Messenger Woods is the Forest Preserve District’s oldest forest preserve dating back to 1930, just a few years after the District was formed by referendum in 1926. The preserve's trees have been protected for almost a century, untouched other than by occasional prescribed burning to keep the understory in check, the preserve said.
The Will County trees were nominated by David Shepard. Shepard, an environmental science teacher, is a tree aficionado and a fan of Messenger Woods Nature Preserve.
Almost 40 years ago, Shepard successfully nominated five trees to the list, but the state cleared its Big Tree list in 2013. Shepard nominated new trees to the list in July 2020, according to the preserve.
In addition to the jack pine and the black maple, Shepard also nominated a red oak and a red pine at Messenger Woods. Those two trees didn’t make the list, but Shepard plans to do some re-measuring this year.
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