UM Scientists Study Shifts in Forest Cover Caused by Fires, Climate Change
University of Montana scientists examined where high-severity wildfires – combined with hot, dry conditions following fire – are likely to cause shifts from ponderosa pine and Douglas-fir forests to different types of vegetation across the species’ range from Montana to New Mexico. They predict 16% of ponderosa pine and 10% of Douglas-fir forests in the Rocky Mountains could be lost by roughly 2050 due to the combination of high-severity fire and climate change. Their new study, “Fire-catalyzed Vegetation Shifts in Ponderosa Pine and Douglas-fir Forests of the Western United States,” was published Sept. 18 in the academic journal Environmental Research Letters.
“Forests in the West are increasingly affected by wildfire and climate change, and there is concern that this combination may lead to the loss of forests,” said Kimberley Davis, a research scientist in UM’s W.A. Franke College of Forestry and Conservation and the study’s lead author. “Forests may not return after wildfires if two things occur. First, there needs to be a high severity fire that kills adult trees. Second, there needs to be a failure of tree regeneration following the fire.”
If this combination occurs, and trees don’t regenerate, land cover will shift from ponderosa pine and Douglas-fir forests to shrubland, grassland or other forest types. To predict where such shifts are most likely, the authors compared projections of areas most likely to burn at high severity with projections of where the climate may be too hot and dry for trees to regenerate after fires.
“We know that ponderosa pine and Douglas-fir regeneration after wildfires is sensitive to seasonal climate conditions and that conditions are already too hot and dry for regeneration at some of our study sites,” Davis said. “We did not know how widespread these limiting climate conditions were and how that may change in the future.”
The researchers found that the area that can support tree regeneration has declined significantly since the 1980s, and they expect that trend to continue in the near-term future.
Read the full story from University of Montana here.