Western Red-Cedar
Thuja plicata
Appearance
Range & Habitat
reciprocal relationships
Decomposers such as fungi and insects contribute to the health of trees through the release of nutrients kept in leaves of plants and deceased animals. Live trees can be homes for birds, bugs, and even bears! Bears and other animals use old hollow red cedar trees as winter dens. Fallen cedars can function as nurse trees, which help grow new saplings, shrubs, and can be homes for insects and other decomposers.
Coastal First Nations, such as the Haidi First Nation, have reciprocal relationships with these trees. Honoring every part of the tree is important. Some trees are culturally modified, and strips of bark are used in making mats, clothing, baskets, nets, fishing lines and medicines. The Tla’amin First Nation use cedar wood as a construction material for making longhouses and for canoes. They also use cedar oils for their antibacterial properties and bark for water-repellant clothing.
These trees are threatened by climate change as fires and drought increase in the province. Old-growth forests, and western red-cedars, are also in danger of clearcut logging, with only a small fraction of these ancient forests remaining in B.C.