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Dr. Reese Halter

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Climate Disruption: Drought and Dead Trees

Posted: 10/05/11 08:37 PM ET

History is rich with lessons, but will political hubris take heed of past civilizations annihilated by drought? The Akkadian, Moche, Tiwanaku, Mayan, and Anasazi to name but a few are well documented in our history books.

When speaking this week to colleagues in Texas on the brutal drought gripping the South and estimated 60 million dying or dead trees in the seven counties surrounding Houston -- a city normally contending with deluge, not drought -- I was struck by the fact that neither the state nor the feds have any plans currently in place to deal with climate disruption.

Droughts are enveloping regions worldwide, and killing mature forests on every forested continent. And every climate model that I have seen predicts that as greenhouse gases rise (from the burning of fossil fuels) so too will the incidences of drought.

There's 180 million acres of Ponderosa pines spreading across the West and up until 90 years ago surface fires ignited by lightning burned at least once a decade. As a result these ecosystems developed some nifty traits to adapt to these fast moving surface fires. Foot-thick bark and holding the first live branches 18 feet or so above the surface enabled them to easily grow with the occurrence of wildfires. With a Smokey Bear fire policy in place to extinguish all fires our Ponderosa forests are now over-crowded, sickly, water-starved and awaiting the insatiable pine bark beetles.

Several proposals have been put forward by leading restoration scientists to thin-out these forests; they are the life force providing clean air and a safe water supply to millions of citizens, industries and agriculture across the West. Problem. The lawmakers refuse to acknowledge the science irrefutably showing that releasing 82 million metric tons of greenhouse gases daily on Earth are forcing the climate. These are the same lawmakers, I might add, that welcome the innovative science enabling them to use their smart phones, i-tablets and flat screen televisions.

Instead of embracing the Ponderosa thinning program which would create at least a million jobs and protect four million homeowners who back into these urban/wildland tinder-dry forests, the lawmakers have chosen to support a pipeline from the Alberta tar sands to increase rather than decrease America's colossal carbon footprint. Perhaps even more confounding is why collectively the big five oil companies are still eligible for a $21 billion subsidy, annually. Their quarterly profits, particularly in this economy, certainly don't warrant any taxpayer dollars.

As temperatures on Earth continue to rise unintended consequences of climate change are becoming more life threatening. For example, this week in Nature climate scientists showed one of the paradoxes of global warming; that is, as surface temperatures rise, upper stratospheric temperatures plummet and lingering (banned in 1987) chlorofluorocarbons created a hole over 770,000 square miles (bigger than the combined area of Alaska and Idaho) in the ozone layer above the Arctic. A hole in the ozone layer above the Arctic has never been witnessed before. Let me remind you that our whales (blue, fin and sperm) are developing sunburns in the Northern Hemisphere and if this hole above the Arctic reappears the incidence of skin cancer and cataracts in the U.S. will increase, dramatically.

Another major unintended consequence of rising greenhouses gases in the Northern Hemisphere, in particular western North America, has been the removal of the ecological "cold" barrier in the mountains enabling hundreds of billions of ravenous bark beetles an opportunity to kill billions of mature pine trees. The loss of the high elevation whitebark and limber pines creates a very serious problem for retaining winter snowpacks, which feed water supplies for 40 million of people, industries, agriculture and critters across the West.

Field biologists are trained to observe nature's patterns. We are now witnessing entire regions enveloped by drought and rising temperatures e.g. southern United States and death of billions of trees across the West. The lawmakers are well advised to listen to field biologists whose only agenda is to maintain the genetic tapestry of life on our planet. Are the lawmakers in Washington, DC intending to plan for climate disruption? If not be forewarned: Failing to plan is planning to fail.

Earth Dr. Reese Halter is an award-winning science communicator: voice for ecology and distinguished conservation biologist at California Lutheran University. His latest book is The Insatiable Bark Beetle. Contact him through http://DrReese.com

 

Follow Dr. Reese Halter on Twitter: www.twitter.com/DrReeseHalter

 
 
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01:22 AM on 10/07/2011
So, what caused the droughts of the past? It sure wasn't AGW was it? Were the Moche and the Anasazi driving SUVs? Maybe climate "models" should be discarded because since they are unable to reproduce the past they are a very doubtful guide to the future.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2010/12/05/new-peer-reviewed-paper-shows-just-how-bad-the-climate-models-are/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realpolitic
When in Rome.......
03:08 AM on 10/07/2011
Lets take a look at what greenhouse warming theory and the coupled atmosphere -ocean-land general circulation models based on the physics of that theory successfully predicted:

- That global mean temperature would warm, by about how fast, by about how much

- That the troposphere would warm while the stratosphere would cool

- That nighttime surface temperatures would increase more than daytime temperatures

- That winter surface temperatures would increase more than summer temperatures

- That higher latitudes would warm faster than temperate and equatorial latitudes (polar amplification)

- That the Arctic would warm faster than the Antarctic because the two poles are physically and geographically quite different

- The magnitude (~0.3 C) and duration (~two years) of the cooling caused by the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo eruption
04:27 PM on 10/07/2011
Please don't dignify this lunatic failed hypothesis with the word "Theory". All the word-spinning in the world can't change the fact that human caused climate change is a hoax meant to enslave the world. The IMF gave the game away at Copenhagen when instead of "rich" countries paying "poor" countries, they ALL would have to pay 2% of GDP to the IMF which would give the money to the World Bank which would lend it out at interest. The Banksters hoped to substitute a "carbon" economy for their failed fiat money system.
http://wn.com/Copenhagen;_Global_Climate_Change_Scam_For_Global_Taxes
FreeHat
Really?
07:16 PM on 10/06/2011
There is not a single data point mentioned here as to whether the US is experiencing more drought than usual as of late. Texas is brought up, but that's about it.
03:58 PM on 10/06/2011
There was more than enough rain the rest of the country. The trees are doing fine, better than ever in many places.
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realpolitic
When in Rome.......
03:10 AM on 10/07/2011
Pine beetles are killing pine trees all over the Pacific Northwest due to climate change.
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Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
02:56 PM on 10/06/2011
Remember, forests are not merely tree farms; they are a complete ecosystem. Thinning trees will impact the other species of biological diversity that welcome the trees and plants as homes/habitat, food, shelter, cover and nurseries. As trees not only sequester heat trapping gases, they evapotranspire water vapor that cools the leaves, soil and surrounding area. When the soil is disturbed and the trees removed, the sequestered C02 will be released.

Once the soil is disturbed, something will grow in the vacated soil, and these opportunistic, non-native weeds transported from around the world will quickly take over in the soil. These weeds are annuals and dry out, just in time for fire season. The dried, dead weeds/straw not only fail to provide for and support the existence of the native biological diversity, they cause hotter, faster and more intense wildfires. Fewer trees will also permit more sunlight to reach the Earth and the soil while destroying habitat for the forests' strands in the web of all life.

Deforestation also heats up and dries out the climate and less evapotranspiration. The trees and plants are biological diversity's food, shelter, provide bird nesting sites and homes for the entire ecosystem.
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Just4theHalibut
12:56 PM on 10/12/2011
Your generalities about forests are basically correct but every forest type has its variations. Recurring (several a century) fires are what produced this natural ecosystem. These have been suppressed for at least two natural cycles. Please read
http://www.firelab.org/con-ed/91-80-years-change
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Linus521
In wildness is the salvation of mankind
03:08 PM on 10/12/2011
Yes, fire is a natural component of ecosystem maintenance. Wildfires provide minerals for the soil, and many species evolved with fire. The CA sequoia trees' seeds cannot establish without fire as the fire burns off a thick coating on the seed that must be removed.

However, we are no longer experiencing natural wild fires. We have hotter, faster and more intense wild fires because of alien, transported weeds that dry out in the west, just in time for fire season. Historically, fires in the western U.S. were slow moving and left patches or mosaics of ecosystem remaining.
03:14 AM on 10/06/2011
This is an excellent post. I only wish it were more blunt. To be truly effective (for many), it needs to finish by saying "if this continues for several more months, we die." That is what it comes down to, and for most of the population, that is all that will get through. I don't necessarily believe in fear-mongering, but well-reasoned statements just haven't worked.
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09:08 PM on 10/05/2011
For cut-rate political success, extremist Republicans and Christians depend on failed states and countries to export free AGW from or or dump AGW onto. Greater piles of free money subsequently accrue from being anti-biotic, anti-infrastructure, anti-science, and antebellum.