Climate Change Caused Widespread Tree Death In California

uploaded by Tomitheos August 16, 2008 at 06:27 am
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Warmer temperatures and longer dry spells have killed thousands of trees and shrubs in a Southern California mountain range, pushing the plants' habitat an average of 213 feet up the mountain over the past 30 years, a UC Irvine study has determined.

White fir and Jeffrey pine trees died at the lower altitudes of their growth range in the Santa Rosa Mountains, from 6,400 feet to as high as 7,200 feet in elevation, while California lilacs died between 4,000-4,800 feet. Almost all of the studied plants crept up the mountain a similar distance, countering the belief that slower-growing trees would move slower than faster-growing grasses and wildflowers.

This study is the first to show directly the impact of climate change on a mountainous ecosystem by physically studying the location of plants, and it shows what could occur globally if the Earth's temperature continues to rise.

Tomitheos submission to JPG magazine for a publication in JPG magazine
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Photo Properties
NP! ID: 1510710
Title: Climate Change Caused Widespread Tree Death In California
File Size: 685 × 1024 – 492.35 KB

Created: Sat, 08/16/2008 - 6:27am
Modified: Sat, 09/06/2008 - 11:47am

File Type: image (jpeg)

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