Hardy Scots
It鈥檚 February in the Cairngorms and this is the Caledonian Pine forest. There are three dominant species here, the birch, the gnarled and the knotty Scots pine and the rugged shrubby juniper, all of them capable of coping with intense cold. The birch does it by shedding its leaves and shutting down all systems for the winter. And the pine and the juniper by adapting their leaves into these fine needles that lose much less moisture than a big floppy leaf, and their sap contains the plant equivalent of antifreeze so they don鈥檛 go rock solid in the winter. This forest is so well adapted to the cold that today most of Britain is just too warm for it. But before the great deciduous wildwood, it was this forest that covered Britain, and trees like this that were growing where your garden is. And that means that Britain must have been much colder than it is today.
Duration:
This clip is from
Featured in...
麻豆官网首页入口 Nature
Be captivated, informed and inspired by the world's wildlife.
More clips from Three Billion Years in the Making
-
Ice age legacy
Duration: 02:01
-
Blowing hot and cold
Duration: 01:35
-
Salty soil
Duration: 03:09
-
Colonial Britain
Duration: 01:41
More clips from British Isles: A Natural History
-
Gastronomic garden snails—Taming the Wild
Duration: 01:04
-
Canal plants—Revolution
Duration: 01:17
-
Japanese knotweed—Our Future
Duration: 03:20
-
Falcon quarry—Revolution
Duration: 01:44