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Texas Drought Will Mar Landscape For Years

By JAMIE STENGLE   10/14/11 04:34 PM ET   AP

DALLAS -- Pockets of brown, sickly trees mar the traditionally majestic pine woods in East Texas. Leafless oaks can be seen across the state. Even native drought-resistant cedars are dying off in some areas after proliferating during the last century.

These are the effects of a historic dry spell that is forecast to grip Texas well into 2012 and could alter the state's landscape for years. Already, the lack of rain and extreme heat have taken a brutal toll on forests and city parks.

State foresters are watching insects ravage acres of drought-weakened trees while city officials are facing millions of dollars in costs to haul away fallen limbs and debris from parks.

"This is just so unprecedented," said Jim Houser, Texas Forest Service's forest health coordinator for Central and West Texas. "We're seeing so many trees die that it's going to affect the forest in a major way."

Although much of Texas is prairie and desert land, forests are abundant in the central and eastern regions. The undulating, wooded Hill Country spreads out from Austin and the dense Piney Woods covers the area along the Louisiana border. Texas forests are home to a variety of recreation and to a multi-billion-dollar timber industry.

But through September, the state has averaged only 8.5 inches of rain, nearly 13 inches less than normal. The past year is now the driest on record in the state. Forestry experts won't know the long-term impact until next spring when it becomes clear how many trees are dead and how many became dormant.

Much of the damage is hard to prevent but some landowners are struggling to keep their trees alive. Jim and Alexandra Prevratil set up sprinklers with more than 2,000 feet of hose to water a stand of oaks, elms and dogwoods close to their home on their rural 70-acre property an hour east of Dallas. During the worst of the summer, when temperatures were above 100 for 40 consecutive days in the area, the Prevratils watered around the clock with their well water.

"We're doing everything that we humanly can," said Alexandra Prevratil.

Forest officials said some areas may not return to normal for more than a decade.

Healthy pines normally produce enough sap to help repel pine engraver beetles, which attack the area under the tree's bark, said Joe Pase, the Texas Forest Service's forest health specialist for the region. But many are defenseless now. In oaks, he said, several different fungi are invading drought-stressed trees, the most common being hypoxylon fungus.

Mark Simmons, director of the ecosystem design group at The University of Texas at Austin's Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, said the loss of cedars, which have spread widely in Central Texas, will lead to the return of native grasses and wildflowers in many areas.

The state's timber industry, which employs 63,000 people and accounts for $23.7 billion in economic activity, is suffering not only from the drought but from wildfires that have raged through the dry forests. East Texas has lost more than $97 million in timber to wildfires since Nov. 15, according to the Texas Forest Service.

With the forests offering less sustenance for wildlife, homeowners are reporting more animals on their property foraging for food, said Mark Klym of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. Deer seeking acorns and pecans are particularly common, and more hummingbirds are coming to feeders.

"We're not going to have the food out there for the animals," he said.

Cities have park departments to protect their trees, but they are vastly overmatched. Thousands of trees have died in Memorial Park in Houston. Earlier this month the Houston City Council approved a request from the parks department for $4.5 million to remove about 15,000 dead trees in parks and esplanades. Its annual tree-removal budget is only $350,000.

"We're struggling with a lot of pine trees," said Joe Turner, director of the Houston Parks and Recreation Department.

Fort Worth forester Melinda Adams said the city is using its one water truck to help young trees and those with historical significance, such as Traders Oak, near the site of an 1800s trading post.

For one Dallas homeowner, the toll can already be seen in the giant dead cottonwood in her front yard. Suzanne Sudduth planted the tree in memory of her mother 16 years ago, and it had grown to be twice as tall as her house. By midsummer, the leaves were brown.

"I've lived here 17 years and I've never seen anything like this," said Sudduth, who had been watering her trees at least once a week.

Steve Houser, an arborist who owns Wylie-based tree service company Arborilogical Services, said the growing number of dead trees may pose a new danger in storms when they start falling or dropping limbs. Meanwhile, residents have learned not to take their trees for granted.

"The public starts to pay more attention, take care of the ones they have and plant more," he said.

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DALLAS -- Pockets of brown, sickly trees mar the traditionally majestic pine woods in East Texas. Leafless oaks can be seen across the state. Even native drought-resistant cedars are dying off in some...
DALLAS -- Pockets of brown, sickly trees mar the traditionally majestic pine woods in East Texas. Leafless oaks can be seen across the state. Even native drought-resistant cedars are dying off in some...
DALLAS -- Pockets of brown, sickly trees mar the traditionally majestic pine woods in East Texas. Leafless oaks can be seen across the state. Even native drought-resistant cedars are dying off in some...
DALLAS -- Pockets of brown, sickly trees mar the traditionally majestic pine woods in East Texas. Leafless oaks can be seen across the state. Even native drought-resistant cedars are dying off in some...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
92102
Friends Don't Let Friends Watch FOX News
06:02 AM on 10/16/2011
Science shmience.
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gallon
Those who fail to remember history are, um
02:22 PM on 10/16/2011
Good for you. Go back to your luddite clan.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
92102
Friends Don't Let Friends Watch FOX News
02:45 PM on 10/16/2011
I suppose I should add a footnote when I am being sarcastic.
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Shakeshaft
Socialist Canadian Infidel
02:52 PM on 10/15/2011
The sad thing is, most Texans will still deny global warming and re-elect Perry and his anti-science league of goofs.
03:03 PM on 10/17/2011
Garbage... Perry won the last election with just 39 percent of the votes. That means that 61% of the state voted against him. As for his anti-science league of goofs, many are appointed, so voters have no say.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OldCowboy
Against stupidity the Gods contend in vain.
01:55 PM on 10/15/2011
Looks like Rick Perry needs to lead another big prayer-fest to pray for rain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nellre
growth is not sustainable
12:28 PM on 10/15/2011
Perry's people censor science.

Scientist: "Sea levels are rising by 3mm a year in Galvaston Bay"
Texas Censorer: "I disagree, and therefore I will remove this from your report"

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/oct/14/rick-perry-texas-censorship-environment-report

How stupid can you get?
11:46 AM on 10/15/2011
from jimrobtaz:

"A volcano erupting for one day puts more trash in the air than man does in a year. There is at least one volcano erupting somewhere ... every day"

Reality check:

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn11638-climate-myths-human-cosub2sub-emissions-are-too-tiny-to-matter.html

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=how-do-volcanoes-affect-w

"volcanic eruptions produce ~110 million tons of CO2 each year." - about 0.3% of the CO2 from human activities.

Summarizes the U.S. Geological Survey...

http://volcanoes.usgs.gov/hazards/gas/climate.php

"The half dozen or so published estimates of the global CO2 emission rate for all degassing subaerial and submarine volcanoes lie in a range from 132 million (minimum) to 378 million (maximum) metric tons per year (Gerlach, 1991; Varekamp et al., 1992; Allard, 1992; Sano and Williams, 1996; Marty and Tolstikhin, 1998; Kerrick, 2001). If estimate medians and author-preferred estimates of these studies are used to lessen the influence of outlier estimates, the range is restricted to about 150-270 million metric tons of CO2 per year. The current anthropogenic CO2 emission rate of some 36,300-million metric tons of CO2 per year is about 100 to 300 times larger than these estimated ranges for global volcanic CO2 emissions."

However, big eruptions like Pinatubo1991, Agung1963, Bezymianny1956 spew aerosol sulfates, not CO2, where they cool the globe for 2 - 3 years before resettling.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/Volcano/
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DeTex
Howze yer Mommer an nem?
02:11 PM on 10/15/2011
Reality is very, very troublesome for TPubs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pmoschetta
Where are the Jobs, Speaker Boehner?
06:11 PM on 10/15/2011
I no longer believe that the TPubs don't themselves believe in climate change, but they are bound by the corporate greed which needs to eliminate environmental protections for their money and power, and the TPubs are sucked right into corporations like the Koch Brothers because of both
04:12 PM on 10/15/2011
Yep, ole Jimrobatz down below is only off by a factor of maybe 100,000.

Not that bad for a global warming denier.
11:27 AM on 10/15/2011
And from what meteorologists say, there is more on the way.
10:58 AM on 10/15/2011
Is the religious right in Texas being punished.

They missed the passage about "taking care of the least among us".
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86-44
Obama's loss is Americas win
12:09 PM on 10/15/2011
No we didn't. We help those who truly need it and ignore those who, like you simply demand it becasue you think you deserve it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SoquiliAsgaya
10:24 AM on 10/16/2011
I can't make that call but, I can share comparisons of 700 clubbers with pat robbersnsons predictions and judment calls in the name of his god about world and national disasters. I do know for a fact that this has had to have a major impact on the reductions of snakes to drive up the costs for ultra conservative snake handlers.
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kanook67
The future is not what it used to be.
10:32 AM on 10/15/2011
What we have here is a case or more golfers praying for sunshine than we do farmers praying for rain!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SoquiliAsgaya
10:28 AM on 10/16/2011
Tell'em bushsheit in 1 hand and wish in the other and see which 1 get's fullest first.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jkanon
A pragmatic progressive
10:16 AM on 10/15/2011
It;s called desertification and it was predicted as part of global warming.
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kanook67
The future is not what it used to be.
10:38 AM on 10/15/2011
Now if it would cause deRepublicanation in Texas we'd be onto something.
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davearnold007
The Talker They Lie, The Poorer I Get
02:01 PM on 10/15/2011
Then it would be Mexico, which it wil be anyway when the rapture comes.

All godfearing texans will be gone, leaving Mexicans and Dems from the west coast who moved their following the tech jobs.

Maybe THEN the place could get cleaned up a bit. Wonder if oil execs go to heaven?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dmldoyle
10:14 AM on 10/15/2011
Most sane people would say "maybe we should care more about the environment and re-evalute our policies." Instead, many Texans will likely view this as a test of their faith.
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davearnold007
The Talker They Lie, The Poorer I Get
01:59 PM on 10/15/2011
Hope they can live on lead, benzene, sulfur and....no water.

Maybe they will evolve into a proto-human that just takes energy and water from the air. Oh, thats right, their air is the foulest in the country. That would be a dead end evolutionary branch-like Texas.

And since their god gave them the intelligence to understand the problem, you would think they would do something besides pray to idols and burning bushes, etc. for relief.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dallas Dunlap
10:05 PM on 10/15/2011
Why not pray to a burning bush? There are lots of them in Texas.
09:27 AM on 10/15/2011
When Mt St Helens blew up,it looked like a war zone....it has come back very well,and looks great.
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Trepasky
Sanity is neither free nor easy
10:19 AM on 10/15/2011
Yes and they have ample water in both the ground and air to foster growth.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pmoschetta
Where are the Jobs, Speaker Boehner?
06:12 PM on 10/15/2011
I visited Mt St Helens 10 years after it erupted and saw pictures at their visitors center before and after, but no doubt it will again erupt.
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kanook67
The future is not what it used to be.
09:26 AM on 10/15/2011
Some well known myths that we now know are false!

Man could never kill off all of those vast numbers of Buffalo roaming the plains into extinction!!!
Man could never overfish and deplete those vast fish stocks of the oceans!!!
Man could never destroy those vast forests with so-called overlogging!!!
Man could never dump enough effluent into our vast fresh water lakes to make them undrinkable!!!
Man could never pump enough CO2 into that vast atmosphere to cause climate change!!!

When will we ever learn! When will we ever learn! (Pete Seeger)
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gallon
Those who fail to remember history are, um
09:12 AM on 10/15/2011
Mother Nature has an evil sense of humor. Governor Perry prays for rain and his state bursts into flame.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pmoschetta
Where are the Jobs, Speaker Boehner?
06:13 PM on 10/15/2011
And before the fires came, he fired half of his state's paid firemen

Oh, the irony of saving a buck
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
inmyelement
09:06 AM on 10/15/2011
Is this Obama's fault? (!)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Edward Standley
opinionated jerk
09:30 AM on 10/15/2011
No, but Texans are really bugged that Federal Disaster Relief doesn't come with a free Presidential impeachment. :)
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kanook67
The future is not what it used to be.
09:36 AM on 10/15/2011
I'll check with Rush Limbaugh then get back to you.
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StephenBP
What's he building in there?
08:48 AM on 10/15/2011
Texasomalia...... it's a whole other country....