butchering American forrestlands

evince

Truthmatters
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/01/0...oxnews/national+(Internal+-+US+Latest+-+Text)




Spread by trade and climate, bugs butcher America's forests
Published January 01, 2017 Associated Press

PETERSHAM, Mass. – *In a towering forest of centuries-old eastern hemlocks, it's easy to miss one of the tree's nemeses. No larger than a speck of pepper, the Hemlock woolly adelgid spends its life on the underside of needles sucking sap, eventually killing the tree.
The bug is one in an expanding army of insects draining the life out of forests from New England to the West Coast. Aided by global trade, a warming climate and drought-weakened trees, the invaders have become one of the greatest threats to biodiversity in the United States.
Scientists say they already are driving some tree species toward extinction and are causing billions of dollars a year in damage — and the situation is expected to worsen.
"They are one of the few things that can actually eliminate a forest tree species in pretty short order — within years," said Harvard University ecologist David Orwig as he walked past dead hemlocks scattered across the university's 5.8-square-mile research forest in Petersham.
This scourge is projected to put 63 percent of the country's forest at risk through 2027 and carries a cost of several billion dollars annually in dead tree removal, declining property values and timber industry losses, according to a peer-reviewed study this year in Ecological Applications.
 
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/01/0...oxnews/national+(Internal+-+US+Latest+-+Text)




Spread by trade and climate, bugs butcher America's forests
Published January 01, 2017 Associated Press

PETERSHAM, Mass. – *In a towering forest of centuries-old eastern hemlocks, it's easy to miss one of the tree's nemeses. No larger than a speck of pepper, the Hemlock woolly adelgid spends its life on the underside of needles sucking sap, eventually killing the tree.
The bug is one in an expanding army of insects draining the life out of forests from New England to the West Coast. Aided by global trade, a warming climate and drought-weakened trees, the invaders have become one of the greatest threats to biodiversity in the United States.
Scientists say they already are driving some tree species toward extinction and are causing billions of dollars a year in damage — and the situation is expected to worsen.
"They are one of the few things that can actually eliminate a forest tree species in pretty short order — within years," said Harvard University ecologist David Orwig as he walked past dead hemlocks scattered across the university's 5.8-square-mile research forest in Petersham.
This scourge is projected to put 63 percent of the country's forest at risk through 2027 and carries a cost of several billion dollars annually in dead tree removal, declining property values and timber industry losses, according to a peer-reviewed study this year in Ecological Applications.

Detroit and all the illegal voters in California.
 
why is it Fox news sometimes admits global warming is real and on air on TV they lie about it non stop
 
and science knows that


its all calculated in to their facts

the facts you ignore

Bullshit, they don't even know the impact of clouds on the climate. All the hysteria is based on inaccurate computer models.
 
"Hemlock woolly adelgid" #1

Sad.
Even though it's not the same "hemlock" Plato referred to in The Last Days of Socrates I still like hemlock trees, and particularly evergreen stands.

They're typically 10F degrees cooler in their shade than it is in direct sunlight.

And their chemistry keeps underbrush to a minimum.

There are some interesting approaches taken with mosquitoes in connection with the zeka virus.

We need look no further than smallpox to note that humans have successfully eradicated a specific disease.

OTO Dutch Elm disease.

The dodo is an obvious example, but I've heard of trees native to North America that were revered for excellent grain, and typically straight, tall trunks; that were forested to extinction.

It makes sense for giants to mind where we step.
 
"Hemlock woolly adelgid" #1

Sad.
Even though it's not the same "hemlock" Plato referred to in The Last Days of Socrates I still like hemlock trees, and particularly evergreen stands.

They're typically 10F degrees cooler in their shade than it is in direct sunlight.

And their chemistry keeps underbrush to a minimum.

There are some interesting approaches taken with mosquitoes in connection with the zeka virus.

We need look no further than smallpox to note that humans have successfully eradicated a specific disease.

OTO Dutch Elm disease.

The dodo is an obvious example, but I've heard of trees native to North America that were revered for excellent grain, and typically straight, tall trunks; that were forested to extinction.

It makes sense for giants to mind where we step.

That's evolution, buddy. It's big with the Lefties. Like hypocrisy.
 
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