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Our efforts focus on direct genetic modification, or genetic engineering, as a way to bring back the American chestnut. Weve tested more than 30 genes from different plant species that could potentially enhance blight resistance.
The American chestnut was once a dominant tree of the eastern U.S. known for its rot resistant wood and ample production of wildlife-supporting chestnuts. While it was nearly wiped out by disease, survivors still exist today in Rock Creek Park.
The American chestnut tree makes a Long Island comeback after four billion trees were wiped out in early 1900s.
During the early to mid-20th century, American chestnut trees were devastated by chestnut blight, a fungal disease that came from Japanese chestnut trees that were introduced into North America from Japan.
Chestnut blight is a fungal disease that causes cankers on the trees bark and can eventually kill the tree. Both diseases are spreading across Europe and pose a major threat to the health of sweet chestnut trees.
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Today, the American chestnut is functionally extinct. The trees were wiped out in a blight in the first half of the 20th century. But they once blanketed the East Coast, providing food, fuel and building materials across 200 million acres from Maine to Mississippi, and into the Ohio Valley.
American Chestnut Conservation and Restoration Employing complementary scientific strategies of traditional breeding, biotechnology, and biocontrol, TACF is working to restore a disease-resistant and genetically diverse population of American chestnuts in the eastern forests of the United States.
Please let us know if you think you have found an American chestnut by submitting a Tree Locator Form and leaf sample.

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