“…(Rosene 1937, p391) In the 1940s, Burr (1945Burr ( , 1947 investigated the electrical potentials in living maple trees and found that, although the potentials were variable, the upper part of the tree was positive with respect to the base from late May through to the end of December. (Burr 1947 , Fig 2 p313 (Fensom 1957(Fensom , 1958(Fensom , 1959(Fensom , 1962(Fensom , 1963a which included continuous measurements of bioelectric stem potentials in three kinds of tree (Ulmus americana L., Pinus resinosa Ait., and Acer saccharum Marsh). Fensom demonstrated a yearly tendency for the upper electrode in the Elm trees to become more positive with respect to ground, and a daily cycle with a definite daily rhythm (Fensom 1963a, p833 Studies by Schuch (1968) and Morat, Le Mouël & Granier (1994), quoted in Gibert et al (2006), also found electrical potential gradients in a spruce tree and a chestnut tree respectively.…”