40% Of American Forests Threatened By More Than 450 Imported Diseases, Insects, Fungi
About 40% of all forests across the US are at risk of being ravaged by an army of harmful pests, undermining a crucial resource in addressing the climate crisis, new research has found. Tree-damaging pests have already destroyed swathes of US woodland, with the American chestnut virtually wiped out by a fungal disease and elms blighted by Dutch elm disease. About 450 overseas pests that damage or feed on trees have been introduced to US forests due to the growth in international trade and travel.
A PNAS-published study of the 15 most damaging non-native forest pests has found that they destroy so many trees that about 6m tons of carbon are expelled each year from the dying plants. This is the equivalent, researchers say, of adding an extra 4.6m cars to the roads every year in terms of the release of planet-warming gases.
This situation is set to worsen, with the spread of pests due to threaten 40% of the US forest biomass. Such a scenario would have a devastating impact on the forests, said Songlin Fei, a forestry expert and report author at Purdue University. It is turning forests from storers of carbon to a carbon source. The best way to control these pests it through inspections and quarantine once they are in the system its hard to stop them. For many trees its too late.
The threats range from the wood borer to pathogens and organisms that feed on tree sap. Some diseases, such as one that has infected trees across Hawaii, are little understood by scientists. Together, these maladies pose a growing threat to US forests that are coming under increasing strain from rising temperatures and altered rainfall and wildfire patterns, particularly in the west of the country, due to global heating. There are an estimated 6bn dead trees standing in the US west, with more trees now dying due to disease, insects and wildfire than are being felled for wood products.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/aug/12/us-forests-pests-risk-climate-crisis-resource