Metrolinx could have saved old growth trees in Toronto ravine by moving them, expert says - Action News
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Toronto

Metrolinx could have saved old growth trees in Toronto ravine by moving them, expert says

Metrolinx could have saved old growth trees in an ecologically significant ravine in Toronto instead of cutting them down, an ecologist says. But the provincial transit agency says experts it consulted said it's "not possible."

Transit agency says experts told it transplanting the trees 'not possible'

Eric Davies, a forest ecologist at the University of Toronto, says the regional transit agency could have had a tree-moving company dig up, move and transplant the large old-growth trees on the southern slope of Small's Creek Ravine. (Muriel Draaisma/CBC)

Metrolinx could have saved old growth trees in a small east-end Toronto ravineby moving them instead of cutting them down, an expert says.

Eric Davies, a forest ecologist at the University of Toronto,said this week thatOntario's regionaltransitagency could have enlisted the services of a tree-moving company to dig up, move and transplant the largeold-growthtrees on the southern slope of Small's Creek Ravine.

This week and last week, Metrolinxhas been knockingthe trees down with an excavator and cutting them up with chainsaws. There isnow a pileof logs in one areaof what was once a beautifulravine located between Woodbine and Coxwell avenues.

Metrolinxsays it has cut downthe trees because it isbuildinga retaining wall and new culvert to replace one that has collapsed. The work is part of the Lakeshore East rail corridor expansion project. The agency told CBC News that it consulted arboristsbut they saidwhat Davies is suggesting won't work.

Davies said the big red oak and white birch trees that were on the southern slopecould have"definitely" been saved. One company that specializes in "large tree transplanting" is Environment Design Inc., based in Tomball, Texas.

"Moving trees is an easy thing. Two, three hundred year old tree, you can move no problem. There's a 95 per cent survival rate. They do this all over the world," Davies said.

"It's not done a lot in Canada. They might not have even heard about it. But I thinkthat's one technique that could really bea win-win for them andthe trees and the community."

Davies said Metrolinx would have had to identify which big trees it wanted to moveand then determine if theywerehealthy.Then it would have had to measure the slope wherethe trees weregrowing andthe slope where they would have beentransplanted.

"You cut it out, you put it in a staging box, you prune the roots and you prune the canopy, and so you basically just hold in a staging area until the construction is done and then you put it back down," he said.

"They come to the tree, they dig around it, then they putpipes underneathit and they lift it out of the ground with a crane."

The crane could have been located on the GO Train tracks next to the ravine, he added. At least one large oak tree, believed to be more than 100 years old, is still standing, but heavy machinery has been parked nearby.

A red oak tree, believed to be more than 100 years old, makes its last stand in Small's Creek Ravine. On Monday, this tree was still standing but it is expected that Metrolinx will cut it down this week. (Submitted by Alisa Metcalfe)

Davies said Metrolinx should find a "much better way" to carry out its construction than to cut down old growth trees. He said the ravine is ecologically significantand important to the local community andit's "unimaginable" that anyone would want to cut trees down here.

"I don't think people want to do this anymore," he said.

He saidlarge old-growth treeshold onto more soil and rain andproduce more shadethan seedlings do by thousands of times. They host thousands moreinsects and birds than smaller trees, he said.

"In forest ecosystems, large old trees are the number one most valuable component. They are the real engines of the ecosystems," he said. "Socially, obviously, people really like old trees."

Replanting not possible, Metrolinx says

Anne Marie Aikins, spokesperson for Metrolinx, saidlast March, when the agency paused construction, itcontacted five independent arboriststo explorethe idea of replanting trees in the ravine.

"Replanting these large trees is not possible, the experts said, as a tree spade large enough to dig up the trees can't operate on such a steep slope.And more trees would need to be removed to get the equipment needed into the ravine," Aikins said.

"They determined that successfully replanting not once but twice is a very difficult, expensive task given the location."

Aikins said the wood from the oak trees will be donated to Humber College's woodworking program to be transformed into "something beautiful." She said the other wood will be donated as firewood.