Scorching Wildfire Season Likely Sign of Things to Come
Whats the difference between a ponderosa pine tree and a Home Depot two-by-four?
These days,油油says, its not much. Both are so dry theyre like matchsticks: happy, in the 91心頭 geography professors words, to burn when a fire rolls through.
If thats the case, then Colorados summer of 2018 must feel like ecstasy. With油油温稼糸油油in southern Colorado, wildfires have scorched more than 160,000 acres of wilderness statewide.
We get wildfires here virtually every summer, Kerwin says, but what were seeing this year is the impact of the heat. The conditions are really different. The temperatures are warmer.
Theres no doubt about it that this is bleak油for the environment in the long term,油he adds. But this is not new news whatsoever.
For the past 20 years, Kerwin has documented a noticeable shift in Colorados climate. June has become cotton dry, similar, he says, to conditions you would see in Arizona or other southwestern states.
The effects have already been devastating.油(Just look at the states油4,167 wildfires; 348,083 acres burned; six deaths; 648 structures destroyed; 32,000 evacuations; and more than $538 million in damage.)油But Kerwin says things could get worse.
A wildfire is called a natural disaster for a reason.油Flames have ravaged wilderness since wilderness existed. Ecologically, Kerwin says, fire is essential. He estimates that, in prehistoric days, small fires would break out every 1020 years, thinning forests, preventing them from becoming overly dense. Some ecosystems, he adds, rely on the heat from fires to germinate seeds while counting on ash to provide nutrients for healthy regrowth.
But devastating wildfires 油油that killed as many as 2,500 people in Peshtigo,油Wisconsin and increased tourist and fire activity in places like Yellowstone caused the newly formed National Park Service油to油begin serious fire-suppression efforts.油As a greater number of structures were erected on woodland mountainsides, Kerwin says, firefighters began to extinguish flames, disregarding any ecological value.
Such efforts, Kerwin says, have resulted in thick forests pocked with dead trees, ready to immolate. And even remedial tactics like chainsaw-driven forest thinning, while well-intentioned, are largely futile.
Research is now showing that when a forest burns, the climate is not necessarily suited for those trees living in a particular area to regrow, he says. In other words, if a ponderosa pine or evergreen woodland burns, for example, Colorado temperatures may be too warm to support their regeneration. According to Kerwin, that means many of the states most iconic landscapes will never look the same and theres little that can be done about it.
Those trees are going to burn at some point, he says. Its going to be hotter; its going to be drier. Theres no debate about when climate change is going to hit. Its here. Its climate now. So the conditions that we have now are what we have. Thats the reality.
