What’s Killing the Great Forests of the American West? A Frightening Phenomenon Happening Across the Globe
For many years, Diana Six, an entomologist at the University of Montana,
planned her field season for the same two to three weeks in July.
That's when her quarry - tiny, black, mountain pine beetles - hatched
from the tree they had just killed and swarmed to a new one to start
their life cycle again.
Now, says Six, the field rules have changed. Instead of just two weeks,
the beetles fly continually from May until October, attacking trees,
burrowing in, and laying their eggs for half the year. And that's not
all. The beetles rarely attacked immature trees; now they do so all the
time. What's more, colder temperatures once kept the beetles away from
high altitudes, yet now they swarm and kill trees on mountaintops. And
in some high places where the beetles had a two-year life cycle because
of cold temperatures, it's decreased to one year.
Such shifts make it an exciting - and unsettling - time to be an
entomologist. The growing swath of dead lodgepole and ponderosa pine
forest is a grim omen, leaving Six - and many other scientists and
residents in the West - concerned that as the climate continues to warm,
these destructive changes will intensify.
"A couple of degrees warmer could create multiple generations a year,"
she said, as she chopped off a piece of bark on a dead lodgepole pine to
show the galleries of burrowing larvae. "If that happens, I expect it
would be a disaster for all of our pine populations."
Across western North America, from Mexico to Alaska, forest die-off is
occurring on an extraordinary scale, unprecedented in at least the last
century-and-a-half - and perhaps much longer. All told, the Rocky
Mountains in Canada and the United States have seen nearly 70,000 square
miles of forest - an area the size of Washington state - die since
2000. For the most part, this massive die-off is being caused by
outbreaks of tree-killing insects, from the ips beetle in the Southwest
that has killed pinyon pine, to the spruce beetle, fir beetle, and the
major pest - the mountain pine beetle - that has hammered forests in the
north.
These large-scale forest deaths from beetle infestations are likely a
symptom of a bigger problem, according to scientists: warming
temperatures and increased stress, due to a changing climate. Although
western North America has been hardest hit by insect infestations,
sizeable areas of forest in Australia, Russia, France, and other
countries have experienced die-offs, most of which appears to have been
caused by drought, high temperatures, or both.
One recent study collected reports of large-scale forest mortality from
around the world. Often, forest death is patchy, and research is
difficult because of the large areas involved. But the paper, recently
published in Forest Ecology and Management, reported that in a
20,000-square-mile savanna
in Australia, nearly a third of the trees were dead. In Russia, there
was significant die-off within 9,400 square miles of forest. Much of
Siberia has warmed by several degrees Fahrenheit in the past
half-century, and hot, dry conditions have led to extreme wildfire
seasons in eight of the last 10 years. Russian researchers also are
concerned that warmer, dryer conditions will lead to increased outbreaks
of the Siberian moth, which can destroy large swaths of Russia's boreal
forest.
While people in some places have the luxury to doubt whether climate
change is real, it's harder to be a doubter in the Rocky Mountains.
Glaciers in Glacier National Park and elsewhere are shrinking, winters
are warmer and shorter, and the intensity of forest fires is increasing.
But the most obvious sign is the red and dead forests that carpet the
hills and mountains. They have transformed life in many parts of the
Rockies.
It has hit home for me on a personal level. Virtually every one of the
hundreds of old-growth ponderosa pines on the 15 acres of land where I
live near Helena, Montana is dead, and we are surrounded by a valley of
dead and dying forest. Most trees have been logged and taken to a pulp
mill, where they were turned into cardboard for boxes.
University of Montana ecologist Steve Running says warmer temperatures
in the Rockies bring spring earlier and fall later, each by about a
week, yet precipitation has remained about the same. That translates
into a drought, and stressed trees are highly susceptible to beetle
infestations. Wintertime minimum temperatures in the 1950s, meanwhile,
ranged from 40 F to 50 F below zero. That's risen to the 30-below range,
and there are fewer days when minimums are reached. It's not getting
cold enough anymore to kill the beetles, which over-winter in their
larval stage and survive the milder temperatures because they are filled
with glycol, a natural anti-freeze.
In addition, the past suppression of fire and the fact that many Western
trees are reaching the age at which beetles target them - 80 to 100
years - are also factors in the widespread loss of forests.
So the forests across the West are dying, in such large numbers that
U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar called it the West's
Hurricane Katrina. In Colorado and southern Wyoming, the U.S. Forest
Service has created an emergency management team to cut down dead trees
around towns and along roads and power lines. Forest Service campgrounds
and trails have been closed because of the hazard from dead trees, and
communities surrounded by dead forests have drawn up emergency
evacuation plans for residents.
Large-scale die-offs have occurred in the past. Mountain pine beetles
are native to the West and are part of the ecosystem. Lodgepole forests
regenerate through large-scale "stand replacing events," which include
fire and insects. The die-offs now, though, are on a scale unprecedented
since the West was settled and are so
big that they are having unusual impacts on ecosystems. The whitebark
pine, once largely protected from the beetles because it grew at high
altitudes and was shielded by cold, is functionally extinct and may no
longer be able to feed grizzly bears and other species that love its
high-fat nut. In Mexico, bark beetles are beginning to kill oyamel fir
trees in a rare 139,000-acre biosphere preserve where the majority of
North America's monarch butterflies travel each fall to spend the
winter. So far, about 100 acres in a core area of 33,000 acres have
been killed by bark beetles.
Tree-killing bugs aren't the only problem. In 2005 Colorado researchers
noticed that aspens were suddenly dying in large numbers. That year they
found 30,000 acres of dead aspen forest. The next year there were
150,000 acres, and in 2008 it had soared to 553,000. The die-off is
called Sudden Aspen Death, or SAD. "It's growing at an exponential
rate," said Wayne Shepperd, who researches aspen for the Forest Service.
"It's pretty sobering when you see a whole mountainside or whole
drainage of aspen forest dead."
Groves at low elevations and facing south are dying fastest, and
scientists believe the cause is hotter temperatures and drier weather.
It's not only killing mature trees, but the root mass as well. An aspen
grove is the offspring of a large single underground clonal mass, which
sends up shoots. "The whole organism is disappearing and it has
profound implications," Shepperd said. "When the roots die, groves that
are hundreds or thousands of years old aren't going to be there
anymore."
If the die-offs continue, the loss of the aspen trees would be a blow to
goshawks, songbirds, and a number of other species that find food and
refuge in the groves.
Perhaps more than anyone, Craig Allen is familiar with these large-scale
forest die-offs. A forest ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey's
Jemez Mountain Field
Station in New Mexico, not only are his office and home surrounded by a
pinyon die-off, he also is the lead author of the paper - with 19 other
authors -published in Forest Ecology and Management, which
sought to document and begin to understand what is happening to forests
in North America and around the world as the result of climate change.
Coming up with a definitive understanding at this point is impossible,
Allen says. Forests are complex, and unfortunately, woefully
understudied, and there isn't nearly enough data to draw a conclusion
about the reasons behind forest die-offs globally. "There's huge
information gaps and uncertainties," says Allen.
What contributors were able to do in the paper is collect anecdotal
reports of broad-scale forest mortality from around the world. "The
point of this paper is to connect the dots, at least the ones we can
connect," says Allen. "We can't even tell you for sure if there's more
forest mortality. There's not consistent monitoring."
In 2005 a strong El Nino caused a dramatic drought in the Amazon. It
killed forest across the region and is extremely well documented because
so many researchers had existing plots there. "The heart of the biggest
rainforest in the world turned from a carbon sink to a carbon source,"
said Allen. "If you have long-term drought you can bleed a lot carbon
into the atmosphere."
A lot of beetles can also turn vast tracks of forest from carbon sinks
to carbon sources. Take British Columbia, which is ground zero for the
mountain pine beetle infestation in North America. Some 53,000 square
miles of mature pine forest is dead and the province is projected to
lose 80 percent of its mature trees by 2013. The second largest known
die-off there occurred in the 1980s and claimed just 2,300 square miles.
Bill Wilson - the province's director of Industry, Trade and Economics
Research - said he has flown in a plane for hours over the province and
seen nothing but dead forest the entire time.
In 2008, so much of British Columbia's forests had died they also went
from being a net carbon sink to carbon source.
Diana Six works in Africa where she has seen other die-offs first-hand.
"In Africa where I work, suddenly whole hillsides are dropping dead,"
she said. "It's happening so fast people are in shock. It's a tragedy."
Species include the quiver tree, camel-thorn, and the giant euphorbia, a
30-foot-tall succulent. The causes are not known, but the suspects are
hotter and drier weather, or shifting rainfall patterns.
All told, the paper that Allen co-authored describes 88 well-documented
forest die-offs around the world, going back as far as the 1960s and
1970s, although most are in the 1990s and 2000s.
If there was a way to predict die-offs, Allen said, land managers could
take preemptive action, such as mechanical thinning or prescribed
burning to increase the vigor of forests.
What gives researchers pause is that many of these large die-offs have
occurred with minimal warming, in just a few years. In the West, for
example, the average temperature has warmed on average 1.8 F over the
past century. "This is before we put two to four degrees centigrade (3.6
F to 7.2 F) into the system," said Allen, referring to forecasts for
warming by the end of this century. Trees across the world are stressed
already from fragmentation, air pollution, and other problems, he said.
"I don't know how much stress the forests of the world can take," said
Allen.
Yale Environment 360