Inside Climate News - A warming world is supercharging these fires, experts say. Climate
change is causing rapid shifts between very wet years that accelerate
the growth of scrubland grasses and brush, leading to what’s known as
“excessive fuel loading,” that hotter summers and drier falls and
winters turn into easily ignited tinderbox conditions. The area where
the fires are burning had “the singularly driest October through early
January period we have on record,” said climate scientist Daniel Swain
during an online briefing last week.
It’s too soon to know the toll these fires have taken on wildlife,
particularly wide-ranging carnivores like mountain lions. But
biologists worry that the growing severity and frequency of fires is
outpacing wildlife’s ability to adapt.
Wildlife living at the interface of urban development already face many
challenges, and now these fires have deprived them of critical
resources, said Beth Pratt, California National Wildlife Federation
regional executive director. Animals that escaped the flames have lost
shelter, water and food sources, all the things they need to survive,
she said. The fires are even wiping out many of the plants butterflies
and other pollinators need to feed and reproduce, she noted.
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
January 25, 2025
California wildfires
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