User:Adflatuss/California wildfires
Appearance
- Forest like this is disappearing as increasingly intense fires alter landscapes around the planet, threatening wildlife, jeopardizing efforts to capture climate-warming carbon and harming water supplies, according to scientific studies.
- A combination of factors is to blame in the U.S. West: A century of firefighting, elimination of Indigenous burning, logging of large fire-resistant trees, and other management practices that allowed small trees, undergrowth and deadwood to choke forests.[1]
- "Current Fire articles". Los Angeles Times.</ref>
- Wigglesworth, Alex (July 30, 2022). "Two California fires in the Sierra Nevada have very different outcomes. Why?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 31, 2022.</ref>
- Wigglesworth, Alex (July 20, 2022). "California fires are so severe some forests might vanish forever". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 31, 2022.</ref>
- Seidman, Lila (November 19, 2021). "Wildfires killed thousands of sequoias in southern Sierra Nevada". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 31, 2022.</ref>
- Smith, Hayley (September 14, 2021). "California fires are burning at higher elevations than ever, creating new dangers". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 31, 2022.</ref>
- Wigglesworth, Alex; Smith, Hayley (August 31, 2021). "'Unprecedented' Caldor, Dixie fires are the first to burn from one side of the Sierra to the other". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 31, 2022.</ref>
- ^ Melley, Brian (October 26, 2023). "Fire, other ravages jeopardize California's prized forests". Washington Post. Associated Press. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved October 27, 2023.