THIS IS AN ARCHIVE OF LAKE TAHOE NEWS, WHICH WAS OPERATIONAL FROM 2009-2018. IT IS FREELY AVAILABLE FOR RESEARCH. THE WEBSITE IS NO LONGER UPDATED WITH NEW ARTICLES.

Drought-stressed Calif. forests face a radical shift


image_pdfimage_print

By Thomas Curwen, Los Angeles Times

Biologist Greg Asner first heard the numbers in April, but they did little to prepare him for what he saw.

The Forest Service had estimated that nearly 12.5 million trees in the state’s southern and central forests were dead. But as Asner peered down upon the same forests from his airplane at 6,000 feet, he saw something far worse.

California’s drought-parched landscape was poised for a radical transformation. Much of the low-elevation forests near Mt. Pinos in the Los Padres National Forest and in Pinnacles National Park were going to disappear if trends continued.

A scientist with the Carnegie Institution for Science, Asner has a practiced eye for forest health, and with instruments aboard his plane that give him X-ray eyes into the foliage, he is able to assess not just dead trees but trees so stressed by the drought that their death is likely.

Read the whole story

image_pdfimage_print

About author

This article was written by admin

Comments

Comments (4)
  1. Tahoebluewire says - Posted: October 21, 2015

    Not hard to imagine the lake Tahoe basin looking like the Black rock Desert in a few hundred years you can see the changes happening already.

  2. TeaTotal says - Posted: October 21, 2015

    If you don’t believe in anthropogenic climate change- that is a ridiculous statement-I’m increasingly unimpressed with your supposed advanced degrees from East Coast colleges- I call BS
    http://www.blackrockdesert.org

  3. Robin Smith says - Posted: October 21, 2015

    Go East young (44 yrs) man/woman…you will see the high water marks on the mountains…go North East and you will find the remnants of the GREAT SALT LAKE that once covered the entire basin….

    Your point Blu is what???

  4. Robin Smith says - Posted: October 21, 2015

    P.S. YESS I love P.S.’s:)

    Blu…Lake Tahoe is 1,645 ft deep…Not going to dry up in your short lifetime. So stay put and don’t worry.