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#forest

174 posts143 participants19 posts today

💁🏻‍♀️ ICYMI: 🔍🌿 Laser light technology called LiDAR is transforming Maya #archaeology by creating 3D maps of ancient cities hidden beneath jungle canopy. Where archaeologists once hacked through wilderness on foot, now remote sensors capture detailed data showing extensive urban networks.

The 2016 PACUNAM survey alone mapped over 2,000 square kilometers and identified more than 60,000 structures, dramatically expanding our understanding of Maya civilization's scale and complexity.

👉 Learn more: zurl.co/mAEUk

"Satellite-based evidence of recent decline in global forest recovery rate from tree mortality events" by Yuchao Yan et al 2025.
Fascinating and educational. All the more for us in Germany and Finland, and likely other Europeans, whose forests morphed from CO2 sink to source. The study ends with 2020 data tho, Europe with 2018.
Only non-fire mortality events were analyzed.
I learned how recovery after a drought-driven forest mortality event depends on🌡️💧during recovery; not so much the event severity.
nature.com/articles/s41477-025
Free e-pdf provided by one of the authors:
rdcu.be/eigV4

Don't know about you but to me, a paper is particularly "good" if I'm left with a host of new pressing questions. "Why did they..? Was it maybe ..? What if it had been...?"

For a recovery phase, they differentiate between recovery of the canopy greening and recovery of water content in the canopy. Both are based on satellite obs only. And if a satellite image suggests greening is recovered to pre-mortality level, it might not actually be re-greening from recovered old or new young trees but could be merely dense shrubbery. The Greening parameter is often used to glean carbon stock. Shrubs have less biomass=less carbon than trees.
The water content in the canopy then somehow helps to clarify the actual recovery state. How? 🤷‍♀️

Water content in canopy always takes far longer to recover than re-greening.
Longer = years and years longer.
Always = in the 1980s as well. Which I take as: that's the normal baseline behaviour for a given biome, a given latitude zone, a given climate zone, a given elevation, a given human intervention etc.

Supplementary Fig. 5. c and d show numbers for North America and Tropics static-content.springer.com/es .
Recovery Time in years for water in canopy in North America
in the 1990s took 2 - 12, average 6.
in the 2000s took 2 - 18, average 9.

in the Tropics:
in the 1990s took 2 - 12, average 6.
in the 2000s took 2 - 11, average 7.

Europe is missing an extra whiskers plot. Maybe they saved this for their next paper. But European events are included up to 2018, if I got it right.

With all the factors to be considered, and bias in numbers of events in any given factor, making recovery comparable across regions, across biomes, across climate zones, a global average doesn't seem very useful.
However, here are the global numbers from Figure 1d for
Recovery time RT for water in canopy. In the 1980s RT was between 2 and 15, average 8, median 6 .
In the 1990s, RT was 2 - 22, average 8, median 6.
In the 2000s, RT was 2 - 20, average 9, median 9 years.

Am curious wrt the missing potential cause for the greatly reduced RecoveryTime in the 2010s in Fig.1d. Is that an artefact of the shortened observation time for these 10 most recent mortality yrs?
And Greening recovered astonishingly quickly in the 2010s. is it the high CO2 fertilisation or a regional bias from the events in this period?

NatureSatellite-based evidence of recent decline in global forest recovery rate from tree mortality events - Nature PlantsSatellite data show declining global forest recovery from tree mortality since the 1990s, driven by warming and water scarcity. Canopy water recovers slower than greenness, stressing the need for a multifaceted approach to assessing recovery.
Replied in thread

Life and Death near #HambiBleibt

- Famous landmark: the chestnut tree on the right was once struck by lightning. But it is recovering.

- 3 Rosen have created an unusual forest nature trail in Habach Forest.

Find more details right here:

3rosen.eu/

- The sign "Himbis im Hambi" referes to the near by Himbeeren (raspberries).

Fancy a joke from the air? Zoom to this coordinate in an online map with terrain view:

50°52'44.0"N 6°32'49.5"E

#Trees #Forest

Death part below

🇵🇱 Piętnaście zdjęć z rowerowego wypadu na Dębową Górę koło Osieka i do Chodzieży (wielkopolskie). 20 kwietnia 2025.

🇬🇧 Fifteen photos from a bike trip to Dębowa Góra near Osiek, and Chodzież (Greater Poland). April 20, 2025.

Trasa/route: https://ridewithgps.com/trips/272513268

#WidzianeZRoweru #SeenFromABike #rower #bicycle #cycling #las #forest #kwiaty #flowers #wiosna #spring #rzeka #river #Noteć #Wielkanoc #Easter #rzepak #rapeseed

A view of Elk Prairie in Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park this afternoon (Redwood National and State Parks). Learn more at parks.ca.gov/?page_id=415 and nps.gov/media/webcam/view.htm? and nps.gov/redw/index.htm and #nps #nationalparks #publiclands #photography #landscapephotography #prairiecreek #forest #trees #redwood #california #elk Image credit National Park Service. This camera made possible thanks to a generous donation by the Redwood Parks Conservancy.