The Mercury News

Last year’s Castle wildfire blamed for death of sequoias

At least 10% of the population killed, according to report

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SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK >> At least a tenth of the world’s mature giant sequoias were destroyed by a single California wildfire that tore through the southern Sierra Nevada last year, according to a draft report prepared by scientists with the National Park Service.

The Visalia Times-Delta newspaper obtained a copy of the report that describes catastroph­ic destructio­n from the Castle fire, which charred 273 square miles of timber in Sequoia National Park.

Researcher­s used satellite imagery and modeling from previous fires to determine that 7,500 to 10,000 redwoods perished in the Castle fire. That equates to 10% to 14% of the world’s mature giant sequoia population, the newspaper said.

“I cannot overemphas­ize how mind-blowing this is for all of us. These trees have lived for thousands of years. They’ve survived dozens of wildfires already,” said Christy Brigham, chief of resources management and science at Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks.

The consequenc­es of losing large numbers of giant sequoias could be felt for decades, forest managers said. Redwood forests are among the world’s most efficient at removing and storing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The groves also provide critical habitat for native wildlife and help to protect the watershed that supplies farms and communitie­s on the San Joaquin Valley floor.

Brigham, the study’s lead author, cautioned that the numbers are preliminar­y and the research paper has yet to be peer-reviewed. This month, teams of scientists will hike to the groves that experience­d the most fire damage for the first time since the ashes settled.

“I have a vain hope that once we get out on the ground the situation won’t be as bad, but that’s hope — that’s not science,” she told the newspaper.

The newspaper said the extent of the damage to one of the world’s most treasured trees is noteworthy because the sequoia themselves are incredibly well adapted to fire. The old-growth trees — some of which are more than 2,000 years old and 250 feet tall — require fire to burst their pine cones and reproduce.

“One-hundred years of fire suppressio­n, combined with climate change-driven hotter droughts, have changed how fires burn in the southern Sierra and that change has been very bad for sequoias,” Brigham said.

Sequoia and Kings Canyon have conducted controlled burns since the 1960s, about a thousand acres a year on average. Brigham estimates that the park will need to burn around 30 times that number to get the forest back to a healthy state.

The Castle fire erupted on Aug. 19 in the Golden Trout Wilderness amid a flurry of lightning strikes. The Shotgun fire was discovered shortly after and the two were renamed the Sequoia Complex fire.

 ?? AL SEIB — LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Kristen Shive, director of Science for Save The Redwoods, leads a group around the base of the 3,000-year-old Stagg Tree, the fifth-largest giant sequoia on record, which is as tall as a 25-story building and wider than a two-lane road, at an October investigat­ion.
AL SEIB — LOS ANGELES TIMES Kristen Shive, director of Science for Save The Redwoods, leads a group around the base of the 3,000-year-old Stagg Tree, the fifth-largest giant sequoia on record, which is as tall as a 25-story building and wider than a two-lane road, at an October investigat­ion.

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