"Dramatic" Decrease In Rocky Mountain Forest Regrowth Following More Intense 21st-Century Fires
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The study examined nearly 1,500 sites in five states Colorado, Wyoming, Washington, Idaho and Montana and found a link between Earth's changing climate and significant decreases in post-fire tree regeneration, according to a Colorado State University press release. Regeneration is an important factor for forest health. Researchers measured more than 63,000 seedlings in a region where 52 wildfires have burned during the past 30 years. They found decreases in regeneration after early 21st century wildfires, when conditions were hotter and drier than in previous years.
We often talk about climate change and how it will affect us in the future, but the truth is we are already seeing those changes, said Camille Stevens-Rumann, assistant professor in the Department of Forest and Rangeland Stewardship at CSU, in the press release. Disturbances like wildfires are a catalyst for change. In many places, forests are not coming back after fires. What weve found is dramatic, even in the relatively short 23-year study period, she added.
The results of the study mean it could take forests longer to return after they're destroyed by wildfires, if they return at all, according to the press release. Sites that saw the least regeneration were also the warmest and driest sites, where fires burned especially severely.
Even if we plant trees in those areas, its unlikely to be successful, Stevens-Rumann said in the release. We need to start expecting that these landscapes aren't going to look the same in the future, whether it's reduced density of trees or no longer a forest.
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http://www.coloradoan.com/story/news/2017/12/20/colorado-state-university-study-finds-link-between-climate-change-lower-forest-resilience/955992001/