‘Mind-blowing’: tenth of world’s giant sequoias
may have been destroyed by a single fire
Draft report by National Park Service scientists finds
2020 Castle fire decimated California’s population of ancient trees
Jack
Herrera in San Francisco
Thu 3 Jun
2021 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jun/02/sequoias-destroyed-california-castle-fire
A massive
fire in California last year may have destroyed up to a tenth of the world’s
mature giant sequoia population, according to a draft report produced by
scientists working for the National Park Service.
From August
to December 2020, the Castle fire tore through Sequoia national park, burning
through thousands of the ancient redwoods, the world’s largest tree. By the
time the blaze was contained, it had consumed 175,000 acres of parkland. NPS
scientists now estimate that between 7,500 and 10,000 mature giant sequoias
went up in flames.
“I cannot
overemphasize how mind-blowing this is for all of us. These trees have lived
for thousands of years. They’ve survived dozens of wildfires already,” said
Christy Brigham, the chief of resources management and science at Sequoia and
Kings Canyon national parks.
Giant
sequoias only grow in the peaks and valleys of a small central range of
California’s Sierra Nevada. Because of the trees’ concentrated range, last
year’s fire managed to literally decimate part of the world’s remaining
population of the unique flora.
In recent
months, researchers with the NPS have traversed the charred forests to survey
the damage. In early May, some of these researchers discovered a trunk of one
sequoia still burning, months after the rest of the fire was contained, and
after an entire winter of rain and snow.
At that
time, researchers did not yet know the extent of the fire’s damage. Now, a
draft report shared with the Visalia Times-Delta newspaper, which first
reported the news on Wednesday, reveals just how catastrophic the burn was.
Brigham,
the study’s lead author, cautioned that the numbers are preliminary and the
research paper has yet to be peer-reviewed. Beginning next week, teams of
scientists will hike to the groves that experienced the most fire damage for
the first time since the ashes settled.
“I have a
vain hope that once we get out on the ground the situation won’t be as bad, but
that’s hope, that’s not science,” she said.
In Sequoia
national park, most of the older sequoias have survived fires across millennia.
The giant trees are not only fire-adapted – they’re also fire dependent.
Sequoias depend on low-intensity fires to help them release their seeds from
waxy pine cones. However, in recent years, the climate crisis and a build up of
fuels have led to high-intensity, out-of-control burns that threaten the
survival of the groves.
“One-hundred
years of fire suppression, combined with climate change-driven hotter droughts,
have changed how fires burn in the southern Sierra and that change has been
very bad for sequoia,” Brigham said.
For
generations, Native people in California lit controlled burns as a part of land
husbandry. However, in the first half the 20th century, the state and federal
government worked to prevent fires in protected land like Sequoia. This led to
a massive build up in fuel – dry and fallen timber and leaves.
As
wildfires began to burn with an unnatural intensity, researchers in Sequoia and
Kings Canyon began conducting controlled burns in the 1960s. These
low-intensity fires clear out tinder on the forest floor and help the sequoias
germinate. However, Brigham says that the current rate of intentional burns
have not been enough. In the last few decades, officials have burned about
1,000 acres in controlled fires per year. Brigham estimates that it would take
30 times that number to return the forests to a healthy state.
The
consequences of losing thousands of giant sequoias will reverberate across
California – and the world – for decades. The ancient groves are habitat for
native wildlife, and their root systems help protect the watershed that farmers
in the state’s San Joaquin Valley depend on. Because redwoods remove and store
carbon from the atmosphere at a nearly unrivaled rate, losing sequoia could
intensify the climate crisis.
And the
danger for the sequoias is far from over. With most of California in severe
drought, the dryness of vegetation across the state has shocked officials who
worry that this year’s fire season might prove historically devastating. 2020
saw five of the six largest wildfires in California history burn through the
state, destroying millions of acres and blanketing much of California in
noxious smoke.
The Associated Press contributed reporting
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