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Wildfires may double erosion across a quarter of western US watersheds by 2050

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Summary

Baltimore, MD, USA: In recent years, wildfires have burned trees and homes to the ground across many states in the western U.S., but the ground itself has not gotten away unscathed. Wildfires, which are on the rise throughout the west as a result of prolonged drought and climate change, can alter soil properties and make it more vulnerable to erosion. A new study shows that the increase in wildfires may double soil erosion in some western U.S. states by 2050, and all that dirt ends up in streams, clogging creeks and degrading water quality. Read More in the ​AAAS News Release >>

Contacts

Co-Investigator :
Joel B Sankey
Funding Agency :
Northwest CSC
Principal Investigator :
Jason R Kreitler

Attached Files

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

Associated Items

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Organization
Drought, Fire and Extreme Weather
Water, Coasts and Ice
Science Themes

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