Express & Star

Germany’s Sanssouci Park seeks solutions as trees struggle with climate change

There has been a ‘serious increase’ in trees and shrubs dying at the Unesco World Heritage Site.

Published
People walk in the park of the Sanssouci Palace in Potsdam

The park and gardens of the Sanssouci Palace in Potsdam are struggling with the effects of climate change, with the famous trees of the Unesco World Heritage Site showing signs of stress, officials said.

Effects seen at the park in Potsdam include beech trees with thinning crowns, big branches that have crashed to the ground and trunks with much of their bark peeled off.

Sven Kerschek, a former chief gardener for part of the park, said: “I’ve been watching this garden for over 30 years, and I see very serious changes.

“Since 2017 or 2018, we have had a very, very serious increase in trees and shrubs dying; and not just dying, the health of the trees is changing.”

The region experienced a particularly hot and dry summer in 2018, followed by several more years with little rain. Comparatively wet summers last year and this year have not made up for the effects of the dry years.

Signs explaining the problem with the trees
Multiple issues including peeling bark have been reported (AP)

Heat and a lack of rain are not the only problems, Mr Kerschek says: “Climate change is more complex.”

Well-watered trees standing on the banks of streams and lakes also show signs of stress. Constant harsh sunlight, a lack of atmospheric humidity, storms, increasing fungal infections and the spread of insect species that didn’t previously occur in the area are among other factors that play a part.

From 2002 until 2015, the park lost between 18 and 87 trees every year. The number has not dropped below 100 since; it reached 315 in 2020 before falling back somewhat.

The Prussian Palaces and Gardens Foundation, which oversees Sanssouci Park and many other sites in Berlin and the surrounding state of Brandenburg, is telling the story of the trees’ struggle with climate change in an open-air exhibition this summer, titled Re:Generation.

At points around the park, visitors can see examples of the problems and ideas for how they might be tackled.

Katrin Schroder, a curator of gardens at the foundation, said: “Perhaps the exhibition will help point out that we have such problems here; that extreme examples of climate change are already visible not just where people live in a river valleys and have to experience a flood, but also in idyllic Sanssouci Park.”

A fountain sprays water at the bottom of the Sanssouci Palace
Experts are seeking solutions to the growing problem (AP)

Visitors are pointed to trees suffering from “sunburn”, with drying and peeling bark making them vulnerable to fungi and animals.

They can see that ground water receded drastically at times in recent years, making life difficult for older trees in particular. But there are also more heartening examples, “survival artists” that have defied the difficulties.

Those trees give the gardeners reason to hope. Mr Kerschek, who helped design the exhibition, says they want to “try to continue working with the genetic material we have here in the garden”.

The oldest trees in Sanssouci Park are about 300 years old. The hope is that robust older trees which have already been through variations in climate are better placed to adapt — and that even if they don’t look particularly healthy themselves, they can pass on that capability in their seeds.

One idea is to collect those seeds and grow young trees in a special nursery mirroring the difficult conditions of the park, Mr Kerschek says.

Sanssouci Palace itself was the summer residence of Prussian King Frederick II, better known as Frederick the Great.

It was completed in 1747 with opulent vineyard terraces, a royal retreat with a name that translates from French as “carefree”.

People walk down a path in Sanssouci Park
The park is a Unesco World Heritage Site (AP)

The garden was later expanded substantially, growing into a 19th-century landscaped park that covers nearly 300 hectares (740 acres) and measures more than a mile from east to west. It has nearly 60 gardeners and has been part of Unesco’s World Heritage List since 1990.

While almost all the native tree species in the park have struggled with the effects of climate change, the solution is not to move to exotic species.

Ms Schroder notes that Potsdam still has a central European climate with sometimes long and very late frosts, so “we can’t do anything here with Mediterranean vegetation”.

But one approach may be to look at whether the park could use varieties of linden trees, oaks, beeches or others from areas such as south-eastern Europe that have very hot summers but also late frosts, she said – on condition that they look similar to the trees already at Sanssouci.

“We don’t want to change the park in such a way that it it has a completely changed mixture of trees,” Ms Schroder added.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.