Santa Fe New Mexican

Wildfires damage giant sequoia trees

- By Vimal Patel

Three wildfires in California in the past 15 months killed or mortally wounded thousands of mature giant sequoias, accounting for an estimated 13 percent to 19 percent of the world’s population of the majestic trees, officials said on Friday.

A National Park Service report estimated that two fires in September, sparked by a lighting storm, caused 2,261 to 3,637 mature giant sequoias — or between 3 percent and 5 percent of the population of mature giant sequoias — to be killed or so severely burned that they were expected to die within five years. Mature giant sequoias have a diameter of more than 4 feet.

Giant sequoias, which are found on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada in California, can live thousands of years on their way to dwarfing most everything around them. These trees include iconic national treasures like the General Sherman Tree, which is considered the world’s largest tree, standing at 275 feet tall with a diameter of 36 feet at the base.

The death of the trees in staggering numbers is the product of a “deadly combinatio­n” of unnaturall­y dense forests caused by fire suppressio­n that began about 150 years ago and increasing­ly intense droughts driven by climate change, Clay Jordan, superinten­dent of Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, said Friday.

“That becomes a recipe for a catastroph­ic fire that threatens our sequoia groves, the health of our forests and, at the same time, threatens our communitie­s,” he said. The mortality rates in the sequoias are unpreceden­ted, he said.

KNP Complex, one of the September fires, burned mostly within Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks. The other, the Windy fire, burned in the Sequoia National Forest, the National Park Service said.

The Castle fire, which began in August 2020, destroyed 7,500 to 10,600 large sequoias, park officials said, representi­ng an estimated 10 percent to 14 percent of the entire Sierra Nevada population of large sequoias.

Sequoias evolved to survive, and even thrive, in fires. But the ever-increasing intensity has become too much for them.

Experts say the fires sequoias endured for centuries were mostly low grade. Thick bark and sky-high crowns protected the trees from serious damage. Heat from the flames even helped them reproduce by releasing seeds from their cones.

But now, California’s sequoia groves are dealing with the consequenc­es of fire suppressio­n that has left forests thick with flammable vegetation. Drought and rising temperatur­es have killed other plants and turned them into kindling.

From 2015 to 2020, two-thirds of the giant sequoia groves across the Sierra Nevada were scorched in wildfires, compared with a quarter in the previous century, according to the National Park Service.

The latest wildfires this year led to fewer tree deaths partly because of emergency actions taken by firefighte­rs, said Christy Brigham, chief of resources management and science for the Sequoia and Kings Canyon parks.

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