Here’s a fun story by Real Wild to take your mind off of Covid-19.
A surly and sharp-tempered old horse helps a rescuer save a young, injured foal.
In this video by The YEARS Project, leading ecologist Tom Swetnam sheds light on future fires by looking into the past. Swetnam uses dendrochronology, the use of tree rings to reconstruct and evaluate variations in past and present environments, to study the natural and cultural disturbances of forest ecosystems.
Tree rings are like time capsules. Each ring tells the story of a year in the tree’s life.
“Very small, narrow ring –drought year.
–Tom Swetnam
Big fat, thick ring –wet year.”
Tom examines tree rings along with scars in fire-scarred trees to learn how fires have responded to climate changes in the past. Once Tom knows how climate affected trees in the past, he can then extrapolate how the environment will affect future fires.
“We began to see these really large high-severity fires beginning in the ’70s and ’80s–fires that were like more than 10,000, more than 20,000 acres. Then suddenly, in the late ’80s, we started seeing fires routinely in that size range. And then, since the droughts of 2000, 100,000-acre fires, 400,000-acre fires. Just last year, 500,000-acre fire.”
–Tom Swetnam
Swetnam discovered the following:
•Fires in the American West are now six times more destructive than they were just forty years ago
•Fire season is now nearly four months longer than it used to be.
•Some of today’s fires burn so hotly that they destroy the soil, preventing trees from growing back for thousands of years.
“The smoking gun is basically there. It’s getting hotter, getting dryer, and the fires are going right up along with that.”
–Tom Swetnam
Trees store vast amounts of carbon. When trees burn, the stored carbon releases into the atmosphere and further warms the climate. The warmer the climate, the higher the chance for monster fires.
“This is outside of the norm. To burn every living tree for five miles around. This is catastrophic. We’re starting to see fire behaving in ways that nobody has ever seen before. From our knowledge, with tree ring records and old historic photographs and old pioneer accounts, in these landscapes there’s just no evidence of huge fires burning big holes like that in these places anytime.”
“I really doubt that this place is coming back to forest for many, many, many lifetimes. So, if this continues for the next 20, 30, 50 years, probably could lose 50 percent of our forests.”
“And when we know that we have been the cause of this or at least a large part of the cause of this, then the responsibility, the feeling of responsibility, is even greater to do something.”
–Tom Swetnam
In this beautiful short film by The Source project, we learn about the profound importance that forests have on India’s indigenous people, the Adivasi (first people).
Dokri shares the meaning the forests have to her Kondh community. The Kondh tribe is from Niyamgiri in the state of Odisha in eastern India, an area of densely forested hills, deep gorges, and cascading streams.
The forests mean everything to Dokri and her Kondh community. Everything they need to live comes from the forests. The forest gives them green leaves, mushrooms, plants, and foods to harvest so they can eat. It offers wood to provide shelter.
The Kondh community are gatekeepers to these remote, resource-rich fragile ecosystems. Their lands and lives are under threat from those seeking to exploit these lands.
Globally, around 1.6 billion people depend on forests for their survival. Yet, every year 130,000 square kilometers of forest, face destruction.