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Author Topic: Forests: An Endangered Resource  (Read 143798 times)

kassy

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Re: Forests: An Endangered Resource
« Reply #700 on: November 05, 2024, 05:54:10 PM »
They do say: Most damage was blowdown with top/stem breakage being lighter.

So blowdown is uprooted trees which means the trunk is hard enough but the leaves catch wind too.

Microbursts can snap big trees even without hurricanes. Just an event in a big but not impressive dutch storm snapped trees and uprooted some. It was oddly local. It happened in two streets with the rest being fine, just the usual limbs and leaves blown of.
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morganism

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Re: Forests: An Endangered Resource
« Reply #701 on: November 29, 2024, 09:36:22 PM »
State releases new plan to protect Joshua trees

A sweeping new conservation plan aims to ensure the survival of the Western Joshua tree
    The iconic species faces habitat loss from climate change, wildfires and development

(lotta outrage when they chopped a bunch down to make a solar farm, but state said were dying)

(...)
A new plan by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to ensure the Joshua tree’s survival calls for limiting development in certain areas, including those where the plant may be able to thrive in a future anticipated to be warmer and drier, even as other portions of its range become uninhabitable.

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https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2024-11-28/this-new-coalition-is-dedicated-to-protecting-joshua-trees

....
Joshua trees are in peril. California has a plan to save them


The plan lists criteria and attributes to help identify land that should be prioritized for conservation, such as large areas with Joshua trees or areas with a high density of healthy and adult trees. It also suggests protecting regions where there is low risk of such threats as fires, invasive species and development, and where pollinators like moths or small mammal seed dispersers exist. It aims to identify these lands by December 2025 and permanently protect 70% of them by 2033.

The plan also calls on land managers and wildfire responders to create procedures to reduce and fight wildfires that threaten the species and their habitat, and develop measures to minimize impacts from rehabilitating burned areas. That includes protecting trees, replanting lost ones and other native species, and controlling invasives.

But as the proposed plan notes, its effectiveness and the survival of the trees will depend largely on whether humanity can limit and reduce the planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions from burning coal, oil and gas that are causing climate change.

Under a business-as-usual scenario, climate change could wipe out most, if not all, of the tree’s habitat, Cummings said.

“Assuming we can keep to a mid-level emissions trajectory, we have a very good chance of saving the species if all the things outlined in this plan are carried out,” he said. “And primarily that’s doing what we can to protect as many of them as possible.”

The draft plan will have to be approved by the California Fish and Game Commission.

https://apnews.com/article/joshua-trees-climate-change-california-48b7d86a4438d039f38b79b2c5bd9628
Kalingrad, the new permanent home of the Olympic Village

kassy

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Re: Forests: An Endangered Resource
« Reply #702 on: November 29, 2024, 10:39:56 PM »
Illegal gold mining drives deforestation in DRC reserve home to ‘African unicorn’

The Okapi Wildlife Reserve in the Democratic Republic of the Congo protects vast tracks of primary Congo Basin rainforest, and is a stronghold for endangered species including the iconic okapi (Okapia johnstoni) and African forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis).

The reserve is also the home to Indigenous Mbuti and Efe forest peoples, who depend on forest resources.

Deforestation in the reserve remained high in 2023, and continued to spread this year, according to satellite data from the Global Forest Watch platform.

Illegal artisanal and semi-industrial gold mining within the reserve is driving deforestation, poaching and environmental destruction.


For details see:

https://news.mongabay.com/2024/11/illegal-gold-mining-drives-deforestation-in-drc-reserve-home-to-african-unicorn/
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kassy

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Re: Forests: An Endangered Resource
« Reply #703 on: December 05, 2024, 10:32:20 AM »
Rainforest protection reduces the number of respiratory diseases


Rainforest protection is not only good for biodiversity and the climate -- it also noticeably improves the health of humans who live in the corresponding regions. This is the conclusion drawn by a current study by the University of Bonn and the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais in Brazil. In this, the researchers show that measures to combat slash-and-burn techniques significantly reduce the concentration of particulate matter in the air. The number of hospital stays and deaths due to respiratory diseases thus also decreases. The results have been published now in the journal Nature Communications, Earth & Environment.

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/11/241115124736.htm
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vox_mundi

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Re: Forests: An Endangered Resource
« Reply #704 on: December 10, 2024, 04:54:16 PM »
Human disruption is driving 'winner' and 'loser' tree species shifts across Brazilian forests, study shows
https://phys.org/news/2024-12-human-disruption-winner-loser-tree.html

Fast-growing and small-seeded tree species are dominating Brazilian forests in regions with high levels of deforestation and degradation, a study shows. This has potential implications for the ecosystem services these forests provide, including the ability of these "disturbed" forests to absorb and store carbon. This is because these "winning" species grow fast but die young, as their stems and branches are far less dense than the slow growing tree species they replace.

Wildlife species adapted to consuming and dispersing the large seeds of tree species that are being lost in human-modified landscapes may also be affected by these shifts.



Authors of the study, "Winner-loser plant trait replacements in human-modified tropical forests" published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, say their findings highlight the urgent need to conserve and restore tropical forests, prevent degradation, and implement measures to protect and boost populations of the large-bodied birds like toucans and mammals such as spider monkeys that disperse the seeds of "losing" slow-growing large-seeded tree species.

Winner-loser plant trait replacements in human-modified tropical forests, Nature Ecology & Evolution (2024)
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-024-02592-5
There are 3 classes of people: those who see. Those who see when they are shown. Those who do not see

Insensible before the wave so soon released by callous fate. Affected most, they understand the least, and understanding, when it comes, invariably arrives too late

Fiat iustitia, et pereat mundus

kassy

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Re: Forests: An Endangered Resource
« Reply #705 on: December 15, 2024, 06:19:10 PM »
As Australia’s giant trees succumb to fire or drought, we’re racing to preserve their vital genetic data

Giant old trees are survivors. But their size and age do not protect them against everything. They face threats such as logging or intensifying drought and fire as the climate changes.

Tasmania has long been home to plants ancient and giant. One rare shrub, King’s lomatia (Lomatia tasmanica), has been cloning itself for at least 43,000 years.

But in recent years, even some giants have succumbed. The devastating 2019 fires in southern Tasmania killed at least 17 of the largest trees. That included the largest blue gum (Eucalyptus globulus) ever measured, the 82 metre high Strong Girl.

But giants still exist. In southern Tasmania’s Valley of the Giants (Styx Valley), there is a mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans) named Centurion now over 100m tall. Centurion is a leading candidate for the tallest flowering plant on Earth and the tallest tree in the Southern Hemisphere. (California’s coastal redwood ‘Hyperion’ reaches 116 metres, but is a non-flowering tree).

For years, I have been drawn to Centurion as a botanical science landmark. I have climbed it, measured it, and observed it carefully. But after the 2019 fires, my colleagues and I realised the urgency of preserving physical genetic samples before the chance was lost forever. During the 2019 fires, Centurion itself narrowly escaped death. It was saved only by the efforts of firefighters.

...
more on:

https://theconversation.com/as-australias-giant-trees-succumb-to-fire-or-drought-were-racing-to-preserve-their-vital-genetic-data-212539

Genetic data is interesting but it does not really help that much. For some trees the are no young specimens. This can have many reasons. The trees they sampled are big because they survived unlike so many big ones that did get cut down. Still an interesting data set.
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kassy

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Re: Forests: An Endangered Resource
« Reply #706 on: December 15, 2024, 06:25:20 PM »
How an Iconic Desert Tree Survives Extreme Heat—and the Unique Risk It’s Facing Now


New research has found that the punishing summer temperatures and persistent drought conditions in much of Arizona and the Southwest are dealing a double whammy to trees attempting to regulate their own temperature, putting a critical part of the desert ecosystem at risk.

The study, published in October in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, looked at the iconic Fremont cottonwood, which has great ecological importance because of its capacity to support other biota. It also is resilient; the trees can thrive in both the Phoenix summers and the Flagstaff winters.

As heat waves increase, however, a key aspect of the trees’ survivability—its mechanism to cool itself through its leaves—is increasingly at risk, said co-author Alexandra Schuessler, a two-time NAU alumna who is now a lab manager at the Desert Botanical Garden in Phoenix. It’s not just the heat causing stress on the trees; the other factor is the trees need sufficient water to cool their leaves, and between climate change and dams changing natural watersheds, water is harder to come by.   

“Human-caused water limitation coupled with the increase in heat and drought throughout the Southwest is going to be very hard on these trees, which will in turn create habitat loss and stress on other species that depend on cottonwoods for shade; food, such as beavers; and nesting sites,” she said. “This paper and others like it continue to build a case that climate impacts and water resource management are going to drastically change our world unless we make some major changes.” 

What the researchers found

The researchers used potted trees in the Desert Botanical Garden, which gave them the ability to control environmental factors, to study how plants coped with increasingly severe heat waves. They selected four populations of Fremont cottonwoods from different environmental conditions. During the month of July 2023, the hottest month ever recorded globally at that point, they attached sensors to the leaves to measure the trees’ temperatures.

They found that the trees still managed to cool their leaves below lethal thresholds using evaporative cooling, similar to how humans sweat to cool their skin on a hot day. Even in extreme heat waves, the Fremont cottonwoods survived. That’s great news, but there was one major caveat—the trees need access to adequate water supply, which is becoming harder to guarantee as the Southwest gets warmer, drier and more populous.

“Even when temperatures reached 118 degrees Fahrenheit, which stressed both the trees and the research team, the trees were able to prevent overheating, especially the trees from the hottest locations from the lower Colorado River,” Schuessler said. “However, experimentally limiting water leveled the playing field, and trees from all four populations suffered from a combination of heat stress and drought.”

What does this mean?

For a water-loving tree like the Fremont cottonwood, these findings are concerning. The trees thrive when their roots are in water, which means we’ll lose them as both aboveground and underground streams dry up. Schuessler pointed to Lake Havasu, which used to have a vibrant population of Fremont cottonwoods that have since died from limited water availability and extreme heat. The demise of that desert forest eliminated critical habitats for birds and other animals that rely on the trees for refuge from extreme heat. Even if the water returns, it’s unlikely that the trees will. In fact, the range of the Fremont cottonwood, which has been quite broad and diverse, likely will narrow in the coming years.

...

https://www.newswise.com/articles/how-an-iconic-desert-tree-survives-extreme-heat-and-the-unique-risk-it-s-facing-now
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