Leaf to Landscape: Understanding and Mapping the Vulnerability of Forests to Hotter Droughts
Leaf to Landscape: Understanding and Mapping Forest Vulnerability to Hotter Droughts
Dates
Start Date
2016-08-01
End Date
2017-09-30
Release Date
2016
Summary
Forests across the southwestern U.S. are crucial components of recreation and play an important role in state and local economies. Healthy forests also provide needed habitat for many wildlife species and contribute many other important services to our planet. “Hotter droughts” (otherwise normal droughts whose effects on ecosystems are exacerbated by higher temperatures) are an emerging climate change threat to forests with some of their earliest and strongest appearances happening in the Southwest. The Leaf to Landscape project uses California’s unusually hot drought as a potential preview of the future, allowing us to collect information that will help guide forest management in the face of a warming climate. This project seeks [...]
Summary
Forests across the southwestern U.S. are crucial components of recreation and play an important role in state and local economies. Healthy forests also provide needed habitat for many wildlife species and contribute many other important services to our planet. “Hotter droughts” (otherwise normal droughts whose effects on ecosystems are exacerbated by higher temperatures) are an emerging climate change threat to forests with some of their earliest and strongest appearances happening in the Southwest. The Leaf to Landscape project uses California’s unusually hot drought as a potential preview of the future, allowing us to collect information that will help guide forest management in the face of a warming climate.
This project seeks to understand the effects of the hotter drought on Sierra Nevada forests across three different spatial scales (from leaves to landscapes): (1) water stress and the physiology of individual trees; (2) measurements of foliage dieback and tree mortality in tree populations; and (3) large landscape mapping of the vulnerability of forests to drought using airborne sensors. Linking the findings across these scales will help us better understand the thresholds of forest stress and dieback – including for the iconic giant sequoias – and how and why these thresholds vary across landscapes. Important products will include maps of forest vulnerability to hotter droughts of the future. Our results will help forest managers target forest treatments – such as prescribed fire – that are aimed at increasing the likelihood that forests will persist in the face of future climatic changes.
NathanStephenson_USGS.jpg “Tree mortality in pine forest USGS Nathan Stephenson, USGS”
1.51 MB
image/jpeg
Purpose
The Leaf to Landscape project uses California’s unusually hot drought as a potential preview of the future, allowing us to get information that will help guide forest management in the face of a warming climate. Our work seeks to understand effects of the hotter drought on Sierra Nevada forests across three spatial scales: (1) water stress and physiology of individual trees; (2) ground-based measurements of foliage dieback and tree mortality in tree populations; and (3) large landscape mapping of forest drought vulnerability using airborne sensors. Linking our findings across these scales will help us better understand thresholds of forest stress and dieback – including for the iconic giant sequoias – and how and why these thresholds vary across landscapes. Important products will include maps of forest vulnerability to hotter droughts of the future. Our results will help forest managers target forest treatments – such as prescribed fire – that are aimed at increasing the likelihood that forests will persist in the face of future climatic changes.
Project Extension
projectStatus
Completed
Budget Extension
annualBudgets
year
2016
totalFunds
249577.74
parts
type
Award Type
value
Interagency Agreement
type
Award Number
value
G16PG00091
totalFunds
249577.74
Preview Image
Tree mortality in pine forest USGS Nathan Stephenson, USGS