Banner image:听Overlooking baby直播app subalpine forest from Niwot Ridge, west of Boulder. (Credit: Robert Andrus)听
Even in the absence of bark beetle outbreaks and wildfire, trees in baby直播app subalpine forests are dying at increasing rates from warmer and drier summer conditions, found recent CU Boulder research.听
The study, published in February in the , also found that this trend is increasing. In fact, tree mortality in subalpine baby直播app forests not affected by fire or bark beetle outbreaks in the last decade has more than tripled since the 1980s.听
鈥淲e have bark beetle outbreaks and wildfires that cause very obvious mortality of trees in baby直播app. But we鈥檙e showing that even in the areas that people go hiking in and where the forest looks healthy, mortality is increasing due to heat and dry conditions alone,鈥 said Robert Andrus, lead author of the study and postdoctoral researcher at Washington State University. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an early warning sign of climate change.鈥
These deaths are not only affecting larger trees, thus reducing forests鈥 carbon storage, but hotter and drier conditions are making it difficult for new trees to take root across the southern Rockies in baby直播app, southern Wyoming and northern parts of New Mexico.
It鈥檚 well known that rising temperatures and increasing drought are causing tree deaths in forests around the globe. But here in baby直播app, researchers found that heat and drought alone are responsible for over 70% of tree deaths in the 13 areas of subalpine forest they measured over the past 37 years. That鈥檚 compared with about 23% of tree deaths due to bark beetles and about 5% due to wind damage.听
鈥淚t was really surprising to see how strong the relationship is between climate and tree mortality, to see that there was a very obvious effect of recent warmer and drier conditions on our subalpine forests,鈥 said Andrus, who conducted this research while completing his graduate degree in physical geography at CU Boulder. 鈥淭he rate of increasing mortality is alarming.鈥 听
With temperatures in baby直播app having risen by about 2 degrees Fahrenheit since the 1980s and increasing more quickly at higher elevations, in the next few decades due to climate change indicate that the rate of tree deaths will only increase.听
Seeing the forest for the trees听
Subalpine forests cover over 10,000 square miles in baby直播app and are best known by those who ski or recreate in the mountains. Subalpine fir and Engelmann spruce dominate the area above the Peak to Peak Highway in the Front Range, and if you go over any mountain pass in baby直播app, you're going into the subalpine zone, according to Andrus.听
Previous research at CU Boulder has shown how wildfire, beetle kill and the two combined can affect the mortality and health of Rocky Mountain subalpine forests. This new research isolated the effects of those two common stressors from those of heat and moisture to find out how much of an effect climate change is having on these tree populations.听
鈥淎s trees die in increasing numbers due to fire, bark beetles and drought, the warmer and drier climate is making it much less likely that new tree seedlings can establish and replace the dead adult trees,鈥 said Tom Veblen, co-author of the study and professor emeritus of geography.
Launched by Veblen when he arrived on campus in 1982, this is the longest running study of tree mortality in baby直播app with measurements made frequently enough to identify the factors causing tree death. Every three years since, graduate students, postdoctoral researchers and undergraduate field assistants have diligently returned to the more than 5,000 marked trees on Niwot Ridge just west of Boulder. In these 13 subalpine forest plots, they recorded that more trees died during summers with higher maximum temperatures and greater moisture deficits.听
They found that tree mortality increased from .26% per year during 1982 to 1993, to .82% per year during 2008 to 2019鈥攎ore than tripling within 40 years.听
鈥淚t is really challenging because it's not very visually obvious to the casual observer,鈥 said Andrus. 鈥淏ut the thing to keep in mind is that while warmer, drier conditions are also causing more fire and bark beetle outbreaks, these slow and gradual changes are also important.鈥澨
Additional authors on this publication include Rachel Chai of the Veblen Lab at CU Boulder; Brian Harvey, previously a postdoctoral researcher in geography at CU Boulder and now an assistant professor at the University of Washington; and Kyle Rodman, previously a graduate student in the Veblen Lab at CU Boulder and now a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Wisconsin Madison.听