Of course, it’s not JUST drought, it’s mult-cause. Dare I mention OZONE?
California’s 70 Million Dead Trees: A ‘Botanical Emergency Room’
KQED,
10
August, 2016
Until
recently, strolling through a California forest meant walking in
dappled light along a path strewn with leaves or pine needles.
But
across the state, once-towering pines have collapsed, their
desiccated limbs sprawled across forest floors. Toppled oak and
tanoak trees, their trunks bleeding, decomposing from the inside out,
litter the ground.
Choked
with the detritus of at least 70 million dead trees, vast tracts of
the landscape have become a botanical emergency room, parched by
drought, invaded by damaging insects and infected with a deadly
organism that may have piggybacked its way to the state on
rhododendron leaves
In
many communities of the central and southern Sierra Nevada range, “80
percent of trees are dead,” said Ken Pimlott, the state’s top
forester as director of Cal Fire, the state forestry and
fire-protection agency. “There will be no conifers [there] when
this is done.”
The
catastrophic tree loss has taken out 66 million pines and other
conifers and more than 5 million oak trees and tanoaks, which are
relatives in the beech family. Nearly 60 million more water-starved
trees are teetering.
The
dead and distressed woodlands represent a small fraction of the
state’s billions of trees. But the problem is acute because large
concentrations of trees — hundreds of acres of forest — are being
wiped out. And experts expect the situation to worsen.
Scientists
say that until they learn more about oak disease, or the drought
eases, what is now a botanical calamity threatens to become an
environmental disaster:
Dead
and dying trees are exceptionally flammable, amplifying an already
severe wildfire threat after five years of drought.
Treeless
slopes foster soil erosion, perilous landslides and a loss of
essential watersheds. More than 60 percent of the state’s water
originates in the hard-hit Sierra.
Forests
absorb carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, and long-term tree loss
could set back the state’s battle against climate change.
When
trees burn and decay, they release “black carbon,” a highly
destructive emission many thousand times more polluting than other
greenhouse gases. A wildfire around Yosemite National Park in 2013
discharged as much carbon as 2.3 million cars emit in a year, state
officials say.
Dave
Rizzo, a professor at UC Davis, walks through an area of trees dead
from the effects of sudden oak death near Inverness, Calif.
Dave
Rizzo, a professor at UC Davis, walks through an area of trees dead
from the effects of sudden oak death near Inverness, Calif. ( Robert
Durell/CALmatters)
The
problem is playing out mostly along California’s edges.
Coast-hugging oaks are dying from Monterey County north to Humboldt
County. Pines and other conifers, dried by drought and attacked by
bark beetles, are failing along the state’s eastern spine from
northern Los Angeles County to the Oregon border.
“We’ve
never experienced a change and impact at this scale,” said Pimlott.
State
leaders are paying attention. Gov. Jerry Brown has declared a state
of emergency. More than 80 federal, state and local agencies,
electric utilities and other organizations have formed the Tree
Mortality Task Force, co-chaired by Pimlott, to combat the problem.
Another group is grappling with what has been called “sudden oak
death.”
Some
aspects of the problem are not new. Drought has ravaged the state
before. Insects have been opportunistically attacking weakened trees
for hundreds of years. Disease takes hold. Trees die.
But
the current convergence of drought, bark beetles and oak disease is
changing ecosystems enough that scientists cannot say when the tree
population might be restored. In addition to the millions of oaks
that have died since the mid-2000s, an unknown number may have the
disease, and infected oaks can take two to five years to exhibit
signs of trouble.
So
far, the disease is confined to 15 of California’s 58 counties,
their nursery products quarantined to help prevent further spread.
Scientists believe sudden oak death, or Phytophthora ramorum, was
brought to California on plants from commercial nurseries elsewhere.
While
the die-off of pines and other conifers is occurring on a scale
unprecedented in recent times, those trees evolved along with
invasive insects, and healthy ones have the capacity to fight off
attacks. When the drought eventually ends, pines are likely to come
back, experts say, but even that is not fully understood.
Oak
trees have no natural defense against the mold destroying them – it
was identified in the state only about a decade ago — although not
all infected oaks die. The question is whether, and how many, oaks
can return.
Already
researchers are seeing diseased oak stands replaced by chaparral and
other fast-growing flora. Tanoaks, scientists say, bear the brunt of
the epidemic and may not come back at all or, like the chestnut trees
that once flourished in the United States, may ultimately become
shrubs.
Diseased
oaks were first observed in the state in 1995, in Marin and Santa
Cruz counties. Much of the damage didn’t show up until years later,
and officials didn’t recognize the potential for the current
epidemic. That may have allowed sudden oak death to gain a
stranglehold in the state.
A
handful of state agencies, county crews and public utilities are
removing dead and diseased trees around power lines, roads, bridges
and other infrastructure where they might pose a hazard to public
safety. The U.S. Forest Service, which manages much of California’s
pine forest, has been cutting down dead trees, clearing debris from
recreation sites and roads and taking other measures.
Cal
Fire and other agencies are carting away trees and limbs in places
where thousands of dead pines and oaks still stand near homes.
“We
are literally one spark away from catastrophic fire in these tree
mortality areas,” Pimlott said.
Homeowners
and pest control specialists are spraying or injecting oaks with a
chemical concoction aimed at helping them fight infection, hoping to
keep the disease at bay.
That
kind of labor-intensive work is not practical on a forest-wide scale,
and aerial spraying of chemicals would likely be unacceptable and
ineffective.
Now,
the pathogen’s spread is accelerating, despite California’s
drought, because many of the affected oaks are in coastal areas with
damper climates. Researchers are documenting the advancing
destruction and looking for ways to protect still-healthy portions of
California’s 32 million forested acres.
***
From Facebook -
I
just wanted to share with everyone a picture of our Sierra Nevada
forest that a family member of mine had taken from a helo. It shows
how this drought has affected more than just our farmers in the
central valley. A month ago the count was 66 million dead trees due
to the drought, bark beetle, and forest mismanagement. My family has
property in the Sierra Nevada's I remember one week I was there and
all the trees on it looked fine and the next week all were dead and
now need to be removed because once they go, they'll only stand for
two years.
-- Cody Spada
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