Rethinking Reforestation: How DIANA CHAPLIN Drives Impact at One Tree Planted - Highlights

Rethinking Reforestation: How DIANA CHAPLIN Drives Impact at One Tree Planted - Highlights

Canopy Director of One Tree Planted

We planted over 10 million trees in 2020 alone. And it’s one tree planted for every dollar donated, so we make it as simple as possible, but when you add it all up together the impact is just tremendous and growing every day.”


Scaling Global Reforestation: DIANA CHAPLIN on Connecting Communities & Nature

Scaling Global Reforestation: DIANA CHAPLIN on Connecting Communities & Nature

Canopy Director of One Tree Planted

We planted over 10 million trees in 2020 alone. And it’s one tree planted for every dollar donated, so we make it as simple as possible, but when you add it all up together the impact is just tremendous and growing every day.”


Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest with DR. SUZANNE SIMARD - Highlights

Finding the Mother Tree: Discovering the Wisdom of the Forest with DR. SUZANNE SIMARD - Highlights

Professor of Forest Ecology
Author of Finding the Mother Tree

Think of yourself as a tree. You’ve got neighbours that you live beside for hundreds if not thousands of years, and none of you can move around, so you just have to communicate in other ways. And so trees have evolved to have these ways of communicating with each other, and they’re sophisticated, they’re nuanced. They include things like transmitting information through these root networks that link them together. They transmit information to each other through the air, so they perceive each other, they communicate and then they respond to each other. And that language is complex.

DR. SUZANNE SIMARD - Professor of Forest Ecology & Author of Finding the Mother Tree

DR. SUZANNE SIMARD - Professor of Forest Ecology & Author of Finding the Mother Tree

Professor of Forest Ecology
Author of Finding the Mother Tree

Think of yourself as a tree. You’ve got neighbours that you live beside for hundreds if not thousands of years, and none of you can move around, so you just have to communicate in other ways. And so trees have evolved to have these ways of communicating with each other, and they’re sophisticated, they’re nuanced. They include things like transmitting information through these root networks that link them together. They transmit information to each other through the air, so they perceive each other, they communicate and then they respond to each other. And that language is complex.