Trees in Trouble: Wildfires, Infestations, and Climate Change

Trees in Trouble: Wildfires, Infestations, and Climate Change

by Daniel Mathews

Narrated by Jamie Hanes

Unabridged — 8 hours, 53 minutes

Trees in Trouble: Wildfires, Infestations, and Climate Change

Trees in Trouble: Wildfires, Infestations, and Climate Change

by Daniel Mathews

Narrated by Jamie Hanes

Unabridged — 8 hours, 53 minutes

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Overview

Climate change manifests in many ways across America, but few as dramatic as the attacks on our western pine forests. In Trees in Trouble, Daniel Mathews tells the urgent story of this loss, accompanying burn crews and forest ecologists as they study the myriad risk factors and refine techniques for saving this important, limited resource. Mathews transports listeners from the exquisitely aromatic haze of ponderosa and Jeffrey pine groves to the fantastic gnarls and whorls of five-thousand-year-old bristlecone pines, from genetic-test nurseries where white-pine seedlings are deliberately infected with their mortal enemy to the hottest mega-fire sites and neighborhoods leveled by fire tornadoes or ember blizzards. Scrupulously researched, Trees in Trouble not only explores the devastating ripple effects of climate change, but also introduces us to the people devoting their lives to saving our forests. Mathews also offers hope: a new approach to managing western pine forests is underway. Trees in Trouble explores how we might succeed in sustaining our forests through the challenging transition to a new environment.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

10/14/2019

Natural historian Matthews (Natural History of the Pacific Northwest Mountains) vividly relates the complex environmental situation facing America’s western pine forests in this fascinating account. He draws in his audience from the opening line, noting that in “western North America there are living pine trees older than the Egyptian pyramids,” thanks to several millennia of fairly consistent temperatures. In contrast, he sees the current era of global warming bringing dramatic and rapid changes, including the disappearance of entire species of trees from these forests. Mathews also illuminates other existential threats facing the landscape, including from devastating wildfires and insect infestations. He is particularly good at articulating why environmentalists should “enthusiastically accept... low- to moderate-severity fires” that thin out overgrown forests and reduce the fuel available for more serious blazes which humans have more difficulty controlling, and from which forests have difficulty recovering. Mathews also analyzes the fascinating biological measures and countermeasures developed by certain trees and the beetles which feed off of them, and explains how the decrease in cold snaps caused by global warming makes mountain pine beetle outbreaks unstoppable. Eco-conscious readers, even those unversed in this seemingly niche subject, will be intrigued and enlightened by Matthews’s thoughtful work. (Apr.)

From the Publisher

"The appeal of Mathews' evaluation of these valuable conifer forests may skew slightly to the more scientifically minded reader, yet his deeply personal connection to the land and its majestic trees makes this equally suitable for any tree lover and everyone concerned about the state of the planet."—Booklist

"A walk in the woods with an environmental journalist and natural-history writer reveals that the forested world is in grave danger . . . His book sounds a timely warning to pay more heed to the health of the woodlands. Thoughtful environmental reportage suggesting that the fate of trees is the fate of all life." —Kirkus Reviews

"Natural historian Mathews vividly relates the complex environmental situation facing America's western pine forests in this fascinating account . . . Eco-conscious readers, even those unversed in this seemingly niche subject, will be intrigued and enlightened by Mathews's thoughtful work." —Publishers Weekly

"Lays out challenges facing today's pine forests that inspire new respect for their strength and resilience-and for the dilemma they're in." —Amy Wang, The Oregonian

"Trees in Trouble, the work of a self-avowed tree lover, is no environmentalist screed. Daniel Mathews has written a comprehensive, deeply informed, and personally anguished call of alarm about the great conifer forests of the dry American West. He takes you to the sites around the region where scientists have been collecting data and building a grave prognosis: some major forests are dead, some dying, many in danger. The fires grow more intense every year. Yes, global warming has a hand in it, but the tragically misguided management practices of the twentieth century bear most of the blame. There is hope, says Mathews—you can't hang out with old trees and not feel hope—but the strong medicine our forests need will not please aesthetes or wilderness purists. It involves preempting fierce fires with cooler ones and considerable work with chain saws. Trees in Trouble is crucial reading for anyone who cares about the Mountain West." —John Daniel, author of The Trail Home and Rogue River Journal

Library Journal

01/01/2020

In this highly informative book, Mathews (Natural History of the Pacific Northwest Mountains) explains the various forces, such as high-severity fires and tree diseases, that are currently wreaking havoc on the health of forests in the western parts of North America. This timely work, while sober reading, offers some hope and a few solutions as to how forests and their trees can adapt, with human help and support, to meet tougher times. Exhaustively researched with an extensive bibliography, this work does not skimp on information. Instead of focusing on just one aspect of the many issues facing western pine forests, Mathews interweaves them to create an overall picture, effectively showing how everything is coming together into a "perfect storm" situation for forests, their trees, and animals that rely on the ecosystem of the forest. The one downside to the book itself is that the presentation of all this information is somewhat muddled, requiring a close reading for full comprehension. VERDICT Overall, an impressive and prescient addition to an ever-growing oeuvre on the effects of climate change to an environment.—Laura Hiatt, Fort Collins, CO

Kirkus Reviews

2020-01-07
A walk in the woods with an environmental journalist and natural-history writer reveals that the forested world is in grave danger.

As Oregon-based naturalist Mathews (Natural History of the Pacific Northwest Mountains, 2017, etc.) writes, there are 113 species of pine tree, the most abundant and various of any conifer genus. All are in trouble to one extent or another because of climate change, from saplings to "living pine trees older than the Egyptian pyramids." The author roams the world and the scientific literature to examine the many threats that pines face and their previous adaptations. The logic of the lodgepole, for instance, is impressive: Its cone carries a resin that melts at 113 degrees Fahrenheit, protecting the seeds inside the cone from fire. "The fire kills the pines but melts their cone-sealing resin," he writes; "the cone scales open over several days or weeks, shedding seeds upon a wide-open seedbed." Massive fires being an increasingly common phenomenon, particularly in the West, this adaptation is highly useful. On that note, Mathews observes, many forest scientists believe that there's a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy in the fire regime—i.e., the kinds of dense forests we cultivate demand huge fires. American logging trucks seem somehow incomplete without their loads of giant trees, after all, whereas European foresters favor smaller trees that wouldn't make for ship masts or I-beams but that do just fine to make studs. In many places, the destruction of fire pales next to that of pine borer beetles, both a harbinger and an effect of climate change. It's difficult to control both, though, as Mathews writes; the cost of protecting homes in forests by doing such things as burying power lines is often so high that people have little motivation apart from self-preservation to do that necessary work. And, asks the author, "if self-preservation isn't a motivation, what would be?" His book sounds a timely warning to pay more heed to the health of the woodlands.

Thoughtful environmental reportage suggesting that the fate of trees is the fate of all life.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177947198
Publisher: Dreamscape Media
Publication date: 04/07/2020
Edition description: Unabridged
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