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Air Pollution Increases Forest Susceptibility to Wildfires: a Case Study for the San Bernardino Mountains in Southern California

Authored By: N. E. Grulke, T. Paine, R. A. Minnich, P. Riggan

Many factors increase susceptibility of forests to wildfire. Among them are increases in human population, changes in land use, fire suppression, and frequent droughts. These factors have been exacerbating forest susceptibility to wildfires over the last century in southern California. Here we report on the significant role that air pollution has on increasing forest susceptibility to wildfires, as unfolded in the San Bernardino Mountains from 1999 to 2003. Air pollution, specifically ozone (O3), and wet and dry deposition of nitrogenous compounds from fossil fuel combustion, has significantly increased since industrialization of the region after WWII. Ozone and elevated nitrogen deposition cause specific changes in forest tree carbon, nitrogen, and water balance that enhance individual tree susceptibility to drought and bark beetle attack, and these changes contribute to whole ecosystem susceptibility to wildfire. For example, elevated O3 and N deposition increase leaf turnover rates and leaf and branch litter, and decrease decomposability of litter. Uncharacteristically, deep litter layers develop in mixed conifer forests affected by air pollutants. Elevated O3 and N deposition decrease the proportion of whole tree biomass in foliage and roots, the latter effect increasing tree susceptibility to drought and beetle attack. Because both foliar and root mass is compromised, carbohydrates are stored in the bole over winter. Elevated O3 increases drought stress by significantly reducing plant control of water loss. The resulting increase in canopy transpiration, combined with [O3 + N deposition]-induced decreases in root mass significantly increase tree susceptibility to drought stress, and when additionally combined with increased bole carbohydrates, perhaps all contribute to success of bark beetle attack. Phenomenological and experimental evidence is presented to support the role of these factors contributing to the susceptibility of forests to wildfire in southern California.


Subsections found in Air Pollution Increases Forest Susceptibility to Wildfires: a Case Study for the San Bernardino Mountains in Southern California
  • Introduction : Many factors combine to increase forest susceptibility to wildfire in southern California, and most of these were set in motion decades ago.
  • Effects of Periodic Drought : Although there is an increase in evapotranspiration from west to east, weather that results in precipitation in the San Bernardino Mountains is generally a regional phenomenon.
  • Susceptibility to Successful Bark Beetle Attack : Air pollution exposure (O3 and N deposition) increases tree susceptibility to drought stress, and drought stress increases tree susceptibility to successful beetle attack.
  • Conclusions : The role of air pollutants in increasing tree susceptibility to drought, successful bark beetle attack, tree mortality, and the susceptibility of forests to wildfire have not been studied extensively.

Encyclopedia ID: p3350



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