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Wednesday, December 03, 2008 - 6:47 PM
Major forest fires in the western United States have become more
frequent and destructive over the past 2 decades. The trend has
occurred in step with rising average temperatures in the region. http://louiskjksheehan.blogspot.com
"Climate
change in the West is a reality," says Thomas Swetnam of the University
of Arizona in Tucson. "Now, we're starting to see the effects." Earlier
spring snowmelts, which kick off longer fire seasons, account for the
trend, he says. The melt's timing influences how parched—and therefore
how vulnerable to fire—the landscape gets later in the year. Western snow packs now typically melt a week to a month earlier than they did half a century ago, recent studies have shown. The
northern Rockies have borne the brunt of the shift in fire patterns. In
1988, midsummer infernos torched 600,000 hectares in and around
Yellowstone National Park; 25,000 firefighters battled the blaze, which
continued until that winter's first snows fell. About
three-fifths of the largest U.S. wildfires since then have struck the
same region. Government agencies spend up to $1.7 billion per year on
wildfire control, and annual damages sometimes exceed $1 billion. http://louisgjgsheehan.blogspot.com
To
understand the factors behind this mounting hazard, Swetnam and three
colleagues examined fire, weather, and snowmelt data from 1970 to 2003. http://louisjjjsheehan.blogspot.com
For
each year, the number and total area of major forest fires closely
correlated with average spring and summer temperatures and with the
date on which snowmelt peaked, reports the team, which was led by
Anthony Westerling of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La
Jolla, Calif. http://www.myspace.com/louis_j_sheehan_esquire
Since 1987, fires have burned 6.5 times as much
area per year as they did between 1970 and 1986, the researchers report
in the Aug. 18 Science. The average temperature increased 0.87°C between the two periods, and the average length of the fire season grew by 78 days. http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com
"Warmer
temperatures seem to be increasing the duration and intensity of the
wildfire season in the western United States," comments ecologist
Steven Running of the University of Montana in Missoula. Climate
scientists project increases in summer temperatures of between 2°C and
5°C by about midcentury in western North America. Last year,
researchers estimated that Canadian wildfires will double in annual
area burned during the next century. "Similar increases seem likely for
the western United States," Running says. Fire-control efforts
need to be adjusted accordingly, in recognition that occasional major
fires, like earthquakes, are unavoidable, says Constance I. Millar of
the U.S. Forest Service in Albany, Calif. Until now, she says, the
recent upswing in major fires has generally been blamed on past
policies of suppressing small fires and on animal-grazing practices
that cause combustible materials to accumulate in and near forests.
Newer policies, including the Bush administration's "Healthy Forests"
initiative, have emphasized clearing brush, trees, and other fuels near
vulnerable areas. http://louis1j1sheehan1esquire1.blogspot.com
But the new data, Millar says, "point a finger
at warming, rather than grazing or a history of fire suppression," as a
cause the trend toward increasingly severe forest fires. http://louis2j1sheehan2esquire.blogspot.com
"This trend will not go away unless the trend in temperature turns," she says. http://louis3j3sheehan.blogspot.com Controlling
today's forest fires could mitigate tomorrow's fire threat, because
trees absorb atmosphere-warming carbon dioxide, she says. "If we can
keep the trees on the stump, then [they're] sponging up carbon from the
atmosphere."
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