New Maps Show Spread and Impact of Drought On California Forests (latimes.com)
An anonymous reader writes: According to a new study 58 million trees are dead or dying due to the California drought and hundreds of millions could die if the conditions persist. The LA Times reports: "The researchers used an airplane, high-tech remote sensing technology and satellite imagery to produce the first maps that show how much water the state's trees have lost. Virtually every forest has been affected in some way, said study leader Greg Asner, an ecologist at the Carnegie Institution for Science at Stanford University. Asner said he was struck by the 'sheer degree of loss and mortality' in Southern California forests as he flew over the depleted trees."
OMG, trees in a desert are going to die?
eventually
I drove through the Central Valley recently, the trees look very happy with the water they've been getting.
We're getting a normal amount of rain so far this year, which is good, but the reservoirs are still empty, so if the rain doesn't continue, or if we have a bad year next year, then we'll still be in trouble.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
1938 storm 'The Long Island Express'
http://www.nydailynews.com/new...
"Cars also took a beating - roughly 26,000 vehicles sustained damage in the storm - while 2 billion trees were reportedly wiped out across New York and New England."
Today you can't even tell 2 billion trees were knocked down. And it has happened multiple times.
Human Population = "drought" in the that region. The state of California and its water policies created the great desert southwest as it is today.
Bring the water from central Canada down to California. Problem solved!
Plus we need it for the fruits..
My books on the pre-history of the American SouthWest over the last 2200 years is riddled with severe drought indications that caused entire civilizations to abandon their settlements and move to new areas. Thomas Mails described a lot of this in his book "The Pueblo Children of the Earth Mother.
That is advantageous capitalism at work for you. And to hell with next quarter's sustainability!
How often has he flown over the trees and made these measurements? Just this once? Every year for the last ten years? Every year for the past 50 years? Every year for the past 500 years?
He has no way of knowing what "normal" is.
Research when autumn is, and I will put more faith in your commentary, AC.
How weird must it be, when you're looking out over the ocean, that the governor is telling you there is a water shortage? This is the very same governor that told us (I was living there then) the very same thing 38 years ago! And look how far they have progressed... NOT! Absolutely astounding...
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
I drove through the Central Valley recently, the trees look very happy with the water they've been getting.
In the mountains of Southern California a lot of the tree loss is due to various insect species, some foreign invasive. Not sure about Northern California. It's not just from drought.
Um, yeah, and there's this:
http://www.kcra.com/news/local-news/news-sierra/good-news-expected-from-winters-first-sierra-snowpack-survey/37193430
Snow pack is 138% higher than average for this time of year.
I guess bad news sells, eh?
If only California had some sort of State Water Project, but sadly, Ronald Reagan killed it. The liberal fiend. He said Salmon were more important than people.
Article says fire affected areas were not counted in the survey.
And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
Ask Donald Trump. He knows everything about everything.
I've been to California. I'm inclined to agree with that sentiment. I must say, the fish are probably brighter and have better personalities. I assume that they also taste better.
"So long and thanks for all the fish."