Extreme weather keeps pointing to climate disruption as the cause

The old term “global warming” falls short of what is really happening to the climate.  The term “global warming” is misleading because — although on the AVERAGE, temperatures are rising — actually the climate is DISRUPTED in a variety of ways that cause EXTREME WEATHER in every part of the world.

Some areas get heat waves.  Some areas get extremely cold weather.  We have droughts along with record-high rainfalls.  The jet stream is disrupted, so high-level atmospheric conditions that traditionally have gone through some areas go through other areas instead.  Likewise, ocean chemistry and ocean currents are shifting, which causes other problems, including problems for ocean life, local areas near oceans, and so forth.

Here are some recent examples of extreme weather:

 

In late February 2023, half of the U.S. was experiencing summer temps while record cold temperatures with snows and blizzards occurred in California.  See this news item:

Half the country experiencing summer temps while a blizzard warning looms in California
Over one million people have lost power as a brutal blizzard swirls through half the country, while the other half enjoys unheard-of summertime temps. Great Lakes ice coverage is only at 7% instead of the usual 30% for this time of year, while there’s a blizzard warning in Los Angeles for the first time in decades. This seems…bad. Almost as if…the climate is changing and we’re not doing anything about it.  This map accompanied the article:

Record highs across the South, Midwest and Mid-Atlantic could topple on Thursday as well above-average temperatures push north.

 

In January 2023 this was reported:  “The past 8 years were the hottest in recorded history.”

A new report also names 2022 as the fifth-warmest, despite the cooling effects of La Niña

https://grist.org/article/past-8-years-hottest-in-recorded-history/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&utm_campaign=daily

 

In January 2023, a report anticipated “Warning of ‘Off the Chart’ Temperatures as El Niño Set to Return in 2023”:

This article is easy to understand: https://www.ecowatch.com/el-nino-weather-2023.html

 

In December 2022, https://www.globalwarmingproblemsolvers.com reported that Scientific American has reported that the American west is experiencing a drought unlike anything it has seen in the last 1,200 years.

 

The extreme heat of summer 2022 was reported here:www.nytimes.com/2022/09/16/opinion/conservation-ethics.html

US had the third-hottest summer ever this year as several states experience warmest ever August
Ethan Freedman, The Independent
Data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration shows that, so far, 2022 is the sixth-warmest year ever on Earth, the Independent reports. According to the paper, there is a 99% chance that the year will be one of the top 10 hottest years on record. “All 10 of the top 10 hottest years recorded since 1880 have occurred in the past 17 years,” the paper adds. Both North America and Europe had their hottest August on record, and North America saw its second-hottest summer ever, the outlet notes. It adds that this August was the hottest on record for the US states of Washington, Oregon and Idaho. The Washington Post also reports on the new data.

 

 

This was posted on August 14, 2022:  Unfortunately, “When Extreme Weather Reigns, Disinformation Pours”

As heatwaves, heavy rainfall, and flooding hit countries worldwide, climate deniers and those obstructing climate action deny or downplay extreme weather’s climate connection.

https://www.desmog.com/2022/07/29/extreme-weather-climate-disinformation-droughts-hurricanes-floods-wildfires/

 

On February 13, 2023, the Seattle Times reported damage to evergreen trees in the Pacific NW:

How extreme heat scorched Pacific Northwest’s evergreen trees

Feb. 13, 2023 at 6:00 am Updated Feb. 13, 2023 at 6:53 am

By Isabella Breda Seattle Times staff reporter

The tips of western red cedar, hemlock and Douglas fir limbs looked as if they were scorched by passing flames just a few days after the Pacific Northwest’s 2021 extreme heat wave.

On June 28 that year, Seattle reached 108 degrees and Portland topped out at 116 degrees, both records. Several days of high overnight temperatures provided little respite.

Now new research shows the extreme heat discolored, damaged and killed some of the region’s ubiquitous evergreens.

Coastal Douglas fir and western hemlock plantations in Oregon and Washington shouldered some of the most extensive visible impacts of the so-called heat dome, when a high pressure system parked itself atop the region. The trees were visibly scorched by the heat within days and some within hours, researchers say in a paper published in Tree Physiology last month.

The research, led by Christopher Still of the Oregon State University College of Forestry, responded to a 2022 study that concluded the trees were damaged as a result of drought and an inability of trees to release water vapor to cool down.

While drought was a factor, the new research suggests the main issue was most likely direct heat damage. As summers in the Pacific Northwest trend hotter, researchers and state forestry leaders are trying to understand how trees west of the Cascade crest will fare. Trees play a critical role in reducing erosion, improving water quality and sequestering carbon, and if they’re damaged, climate change and its impacts would intensify.

The June 2021 heat dome was among the most extreme heat waves ever recorded globally and the most intense in the observational record for the region.

Max temperatures were about 30 degrees above the average of the hottest months over the past decade. The highest temperature was 61 degrees hotter than the average, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Northwest Climate Hub.

Extreme heat can be deadly to leaf tissue even in short bursts, according to the new study. That heat can increase water loss at the branch, tree and ecosystem scales.

Trees in areas where the sun is always beating down at the hottest part of the day — on south- and west-facing slopes, and with exposed edges near roads — had the greatest visible damage after the heat dome.

Tree species from warmer climates did not experience as much discoloration, but species from cooler environments had burnt canopies. Conversations among researchers, foresters and landowners revealed that even well-irrigated Christmas tree farms suffered damage.

The researchers didn’t rule out drought, but said extreme heat is the best explanation for the scorch seen throughout the Pacific Northwest during and after the heat dome. They called for future research to disentangle stressors like extreme heat and drought, and look into how trees have evolved to be resilient under different conditions.

Tamir Klein, a tree eco-physiologist who heads the Weizmann Tree Lab in Israel, was the lead researcher on the 2022 article that concluded the trees’ damage was the result of drought and failed transpiration.

Klein said he agrees with his colleagues’ interpretation that the damage was the result of both heat and drought but wants to know what mechanisms lead to the observed browning. How can trees’ biological processes related to drought response be disentangled from those related to heat?

And, Klein said, he wants to know what species are better equipped for extreme heat, and how the leaf damage threshold varies by species. Now he and his colleagues are collaborating on a follow-up review on how leaves regulate heat.

“Working together,” Klein said in an email, “we expect to fill some of these gaps in the coming years.”

In 2021, the state Department of Natural Resources flew aerial surveys of federal, tribal, state and private lands. They mapped about 84,000 acres of heat-scorched damage — all of it in Western Washington. Douglas fir, western hemlock and western red cedar saw the worst of it.

In Eastern Washington, trees have likely adapted to higher temperatures in June. But trees in Western Washington have never really experienced anything like it, said Glenn Kohler, a forest entomologist with DNR.

When the state flew the survey again in 2022, the trees looked mostly fine.

“They’re generally green and growing,” Kohler said. “But those branch tips that were heavily damaged are still dead.”

There’s no indication the heat wave killed the trees, but it may take time to understand the full impact.

Once a tree experiences a “stress event” like extreme temperatures, it may survive. But when that stressor is coupled with others like severe drought and more extreme heat events, the damage may build up. Western red cedar and western hemlock are not drought-tolerant, Kohler said. And research suggests much of the red cedar mortality is drought-driven.

Meanwhile, bark beetles often take advantage of weak, stressed trees that can’t defend themselves. Once a tree has been invaded, it will die.

The long-term impacts take a few years to materialize, Kohler said. But hopefully, he said, extreme heat won’t be an annual occurrence.

The conditions aligned just perfectly to create the extreme heat wave of June 2021, said Reid Wolcott, warning coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service.

The high pressure system that developed was akin to something that may be seen in the desert, he said. It blocked cooling marine air and prevented clouds from forming, allowing the sun to directly warm the air and land.

And the temperature continued to build each day. The longer the heat event, the more extreme, he said.

While the heat dome may be an isolated event, the climatological record shows temperatures increasing over time.

In the past two decades, Washington has seen seven of its 10 hottest years since 1895. And in 2022, the state saw a record number of days at or over 90 degrees, coupled with the driest June to October on record.

The red-tipped trees are just one of the latest iterations of the visible impacts of climate change.

It’s not unlikely that the conditions will align to create more extreme heat events like the heat dome, Wolcott said. The hottest months will likely continue to get hotter, and especially in urbanized areas that lack green space.

“And that can contribute pretty significantly,” Wolcott said, “to not only the impacts on vegetation, but human life.”

Isabella Breda: 206-652-6536 or ibreda@seattletimes.com; on Twitter: @BredaIsabella. Seattle Times staff reporter Isabella Breda covers the environment.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

About GlenAnderson 1515 Articles
Since the late 1960s Glen Anderson has devoted his life to working as a volunteer for peace, nonviolence, social justice, and progressive political issues. He has worked through many existing organizations and started several. Over the years he has worked especially for such wide-ranging goals as making peace with Vietnam, eliminating nuclear weapons, converting from a military economy to a peacetime economy, abolishing the death penalty, promoting nonviolence at all levels throughout society, and helping people organize and strategize for grassroots movements to solve many kinds of problems. He writes, speaks, and conducts training workshops on a wide variety of topics. Since 1987 he has produced and hosted a one-hour cable TV interview program on many kinds of issues. Since 2017 he has blogged at https://parallaxperspectives.org He lives in Lacey near Olympia WA. You can reach him at (360) 491-9093 glen@parallaxperspectives.org