To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
The Wonder of Youth
What made America Great when we were growing up?
An optimistic Attitude.
Why were we optimistic?
Because when I was a child in the 1950s we had already survived the Great Depression and World War II. So, though PTSD was rampant in the veterans that had returned from World War II and the Korean War, there was also the realization that we here in the U.S. then were the Only hope of the world at that time.
Today, we are not the ONLY hope anymore. Europe, South America, China and various countries in the world are all fairly successful on the world stage each in their own way. So, should we be discouraged?
I don't think so.
The gloom and doom of Ecological destruction shouldn't be something that depresses us. What it should be instead is an inspiration of what we are facing. Ecological destruction is a "Call to Arms" like World War II and the Great Depression were. So, either the world joins together to face this call to arms or just like during World War II if we don't face it we are all doomed in the end.
The wonder of youth in the 1950s and 1960s brought us to now after World War II. Now, we need to once again harness the wonder of youth to keep earth alive.
I was reading yesterday about the fact that they are worried about not 12.5 million trees dying in California during the next few years but now instead they realize that 120 million trees might be on the edge of dying instead. If this isn't a call to arms at least for Californians in finding a way to survive without 120 million trees I don't know what is.
With or without water, if we don't find a way to hold back the soil (like we saw recently in Tehachapi and on the Grapevine) where 200 cars and trucks or more were buried in the sand after being banged into each other in a river of mud, then the future rainfalls will devastate homes and businesses in California for the next 20 years or more.
So, the wonder of youth saved us from nuclear destruction in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s until now.
The Wonder of youth can also save us from ecological devastation in the same way.
A landscapein peril.
Caption Dying forests. Carnegie Institution for Science. Flying above
Pinnacles National Park, just east of the Salinas Valley, ...
X-ray technology reveals California's forests are in for a radical transformation
Biologist Greg Asner first heard the numbers in April, but they did little to prepare him for what he saw.
The
Forest Service had estimated that nearly 12.5 million trees in the
state's southern and central forests were dead. But as Asner peered down
upon the same forests from his airplane at 6,000 feet, he saw something
far worse.
California's drought-parched landscape was poised for a radical
transformation. Much of the low-elevation forests near Mt. Pinos in the
Los Padres National Forest and in Pinnacles National Park were going to
disappear if trends continued.
A scientist with the Carnegie
Institution for Science, Asner has a practiced eye for forest health,
and with instruments aboard his plane that give him X-ray eyes into the
foliage, he is able to assess not just dead trees but trees so stressed
by the drought that their death is likely.
For three weeks this summer, he and his team flew out
of Sacramento and Bakersfield, recording the devastation. Even if the
drought were to end in a historic El Niño this winter, Asner worries
that the most stressed trees will continue to fail.
There
is no saying which trees will die, but by his estimation the count
statewide could be close to 120 million — as much as 20% of the state's
forests. Tarnished beauty
On a hot summer
morning, Asner boards his Dornier 228, a twin turboprop, at McClellan
Airfield on what he hopes will be the final day of his survey. He needs
to fly along the coast toward the Oregon border, but conditions are
deteriorating.
An armada of firefighting aircraft has taken off at
dawn to fight an outbreak of new wildfires to the north. The air is
hazy with smoke. NEWSLETTER: Get essential California headlines delivered daily >>
Above the city of Santa Rosa, the plane veers northwest over the forests west of Guerneville toward the Lost Coast.
Asner,
47, sits in the cabin with Robin Martin, who manages the instruments
and relays navigation instructions to the cockpit. They work in front of
two monitors. She's a lefty and he's a righty, so they share a mouse
pad. It helps that they are married.
To understand how Asner's
instruments work, you have to first step inside a leaf. There amid the
busy factory of photosynthesis, water molecules are bending, stretching,
rotating and vibrating.
These
motions resonate into the atmosphere as reflected light, which is
picked up by an on-board spectrometer that divides it into 480 bands
from ultraviolet to shortwave.
Much like star light reveals a
star's distant chemistry, these bands are analyzed for their chemical
content. Water is the primary focus: The more water in the leaves, the
less reflected light, and the more reflected light, the drier the
foliage.
The spectrometer works in conjunction with a laser that fans out beneath the aircraft, creating a 3-D image of the forest below.
By
marrying the data from the spectrometer and the laser, Asner creates
topographic images that show the condition of the forest. Healthy trees
are blue, and drought-stressed trees run from mild (yellow) to severe
(red).
The images help him to correlate terrain and tree stress.
Higher tree stress, for example, often occurs on steep slopes and near
meadows.
For Asner's mostly Canadian crew, the Golden State is a tarnished beauty.
"It's just burnt," says pilot Don Koopmans of Saskatchewan.
Asner's assessment is equally blunt.
The mountains ringing Los Angeles are "a tinderbox."
The oak forests in the Sierra foothills are "in big trouble."
Pinnacles is "not a happy place for a tree," and the forests northwest of Redding are surprisingly compromised.
To
explain what 120 million trees dying across the state might mean, Asner
paints a picture of California's ecological diversity and size. He then
takes out his calculator.
He estimates there are 585 million to
1.6 billion trees in the state's forests and apologizes for not being
more precise. An accurate census, he says, has never been conducted, but
120 million represents 7% to 20%. Under normal circumstances, forests
lose between 1% and 1.5% of their trees annually.
"At what point
will the forest change into something else? We don't know," Asner says.
"We don't know when the lack of rain will lead to runaway conditions
where the forests are beyond repair."
Such a transition,
especially in the lower elevations, is already underway in parts of the
West, where nearly 6 billion trees — 13% of the area of western forests —
died from 1997 to 2010 because of drought and the bark beetle.
Yet as grave as the effects of the drought have been, Asner insists there is hope.
"If
I looked around and thought there was no way to deal with these
problems, I would be pessimistic," he says. "But there is a way with
effective management."
Among other things, aerial images can help
land managers identify vulnerable terrain and consider how to strengthen
stressed trees and protect healthy ones. A march uphill
The
study of forests is a formative science, and conclusions — like a
definitive number for the trees that will die — are hard to come by.
Park
Williams, a bioclimatologist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at
Columbia University who has been studying the California drought, is
not surprised by Asner's numbers.
If only half succumb, it would register as a very big event, Williams said.
"Think
of it as one gigantic ax swing at the forest," he said. "It takes a
huge chunk out of the population, and if we see two or three more of
these droughts, then that's even more ax swings."
Jeffrey Hicke,
an associate professor in the department of geography at the University
of Idaho, said that regardless of current tree mortality rates, the
state will not lose its forests entirely. But he adds, based on the
observations, the low-elevation forests are in greatest jeopardy.
Beyond
this year's drought, as climate change brings warming, tree species
will migrate, Hicke said. Older trees will die, and younger trees will
take root.
"Species
will march uphill as the climate warms," Hicke said. "Sequoia forests
might become ponderosa pine or oak. Oak forests might become grasslands.
There won't be a wholesale conversion of forest to non-forest, at least
not initially."
The Forest Service survey of California forests,
an annual assessment made more urgent by the drought, follows a protocol
more low-tech than Asner's. Flying at 1,000 feet, two observers count
dead trees and extrapolate over football field-size plots. With their
brown, burnt foliage, dead trees are easy to read.
The observers, though, cannot see what Asner's instruments detect: the number of trees in stress.
Flying
over more of the state this summer, the agency had tallied 21 million
dead trees statewide. Recent fires have prevented observers from
completing the work.
Asner hopes to fly the state again, possibly by next spring, to
chart progression of the damage. But first he needs to find agencies
that will pay for his work. The cost for the three-week mid-summer
survey was $250,000, paid by a grant from the David and Lucile Packard
Foundation.
The foundation funded the research because Asner "is
measuring the world in a different way," said Chad English, the
foundation's science program officer. "This gives us an opportunity to
ask new questions and gives us a chance to reshape the problems in front
of us."
Asner believes the data will give state officials an opportunity to manage forests in the context of drought and climate change.
The
California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, he says, is
interested in the findings because the images can provide a more
accurate picture of how fire behaves in dry terrain, which can help with
the location of fire breaks and the management of controlled burns.
Asner
also has met with representatives from the California Environmental
Protection Agency, whose deputy secretary for the state's climate
policy, Ashley Conrad-Saydah, was stunned when she saw his findings. Water and Power is The Times' guide to the drought. Sign up to get the free newsletter >>
"Our
current survey methods tell us something different from what Greg is
telling us," she said. "We can fly over, do remote sensing and take
physical measurements of the trees, but you don't get a sense of how bad
the drought is for these iconic landscapes that make California whole
until you see his data."
Diminishment of the state's forests means
the loss of clean water and erosion control, recreation and jobs,
Conrad-Saydah said. As trees die, decompose or burn, carbon is released
into the atmosphere, contributing to global warming, she said. Forests
become scrublands with 97% less carbon. 'This is our chance'
A
little before noon, Asner's flight is cut short by smoke and the
Dornier soon passes over the patchwork suburbs of Sacramento and lands.
Asner
knows that dying trees play well in the media, but they have an
unfortunate side effect of turning "viewers numb and decision-makers to
other issues they think can actually be managed."
He hopes there's an alternative.
"This
is our chance for science to play a role in supporting innovations in
management and policy, rather than just bringing bad news that is not
actionable," he wrote in a recent email to colleagues, both a reminder
and a challenge.
Once back in the hangar, Asner opens the side
doors of the Dornier. The Sacramento blast furnace hits him in the face.
It's 108 degrees. thomas.curwen@latimes.com Twitter: @tcurwen ALSO Garcetti's South L.A. forum ends abruptly because of Black Lives Matter protesters Growing homeless problem prompts HUD leader, local officials to meet Will California's end-of-life law push lethal drugs over costlier care? end quote from:
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