Iran Daily

Beech trees booming as climate changes, and that’s bad for forests

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Beech trees are dominating the woodlands of the northeaste­rn US as the climate changes, and that could be bad news for the forests and people who work in them, according to a group of scientists.

The scientists say the move toward beech-heavy forests is associated with higher temperatur­es and precipitat­ion. They say their 30-year study, published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Applied Ecology, is one of the first to look at such broad changes over a long time period in the northeaste­rn US and southeaste­rn Canada, wmur.com reported.

The changes could have major negative ramificati­ons for forest ecosystems and industries that rely on them, said Dr. Aaron Weiskittel, a University of Maine associate professor of forest biometrics and modeling and one of the study’s authors.

Beech, often used for firewood, is of much less commercial value than some species of birch and maple trees that can be used to make furniture and flooring.

“There’s no easy answer to this one. It has a lot of people scratching their heads,” Weiskittel said.

“Future conditions seem to be favoring the beech, and managers are going to have to find a good solution to fix it.”

The authors of the study, who are from the University of Maine and Purdue University, used US Forest Service data from 1983 to 2014 from the states of Maine, New Hampshire, New York and Vermont to track trends in forest compositio­n. They found that abundance of American beech increased substantia­lly, while species including sugar maple, red maple and birch all decreased.

That’s a problem not only because of beech’s lower value, but because of the spread of beech bark disease, which causes the trees to die young and be replaced by newer trees that succumb to the same disease.

The authors found that the rise of beech and the decline of other species is associated with ‘higher temperatur­e and precipitat­ion’ in the forests. The dominance of beech was also especially notable in some key tourist areas — the White Mountains of New Hampshire, the Adirondack Mountains of New York and the Green Mountains of Vermont.

And beech has the possibilit­y to grow even more because it’s not a favorite food of deer, which will eat more seedlings of other trees, Weiskittel said.

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wmur.com

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