Forests Content / Forests Content for ٺƵ en Can This Forest Survive? Predicting Forest Death or Recovery After Drought /blog/can-forest-survive-predicting-forest-death-or-recovery-after-drought <p>How long can trees tolerate drought before the forest dies?</p> <p>Researchers from ٺƵ can now predict which forests could survive despite future drought. Their new method links precipitation to tree growth, and it can help people decide where to put their resources as climate change affects patterns of snow and rainfall that impact the health of forests.</p> August 29, 2023 - 10:30am Andy Fell /blog/can-forest-survive-predicting-forest-death-or-recovery-after-drought VIDEO ADDED: ‘ٺƵ LIVE’ on Wildfire and Forests /climate/news/media-advisory-uc-davis-live-wildfire-and-forests <div> <div class="align- url-embed"> <div class="responsive-embed"></div> </div> <div slot="column1"> <p>&nbsp;</p></div></div> May 26, 2022 - 10:45am Andy Fell /climate/news/media-advisory-uc-davis-live-wildfire-and-forests How Indigenous Practices Can Help Forests Thrive /news/cultural-burning-illuminated What's the difference between prescribed burns and cultural burning? A new feature story explains this and explores many more elements of Indigenous burning practices in California. April 07, 2022 - 11:56am Katherine E Kerlin /news/cultural-burning-illuminated Carbon Payments Play Pivotal Role in Forest Protection Program /climate/news/carbon-payments-play-pivotal-role-forest-protection-program <p><span><span>When pay-to-conserve programs don’t come through with payments, they don’t conserve, indicates a case study by the University of California, Davis, of a REDD+ Readiness program on the island of Pemba, off the coast of Tanzania. </span></span></p> February 23, 2022 - 8:00am Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/carbon-payments-play-pivotal-role-forest-protection-program California’s Climate Refugia: Mapping the Stable Places /cilmate/news/californias-climate-refugia-mapping-the-stable-places <p>Some landscapes can hold their own against climate change better than others. <a href="https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/fee.2208">A study</a> from the University of California, Davis, maps these places, called “climate refugia,” where existing vegetation is most likely to buffer the impacts of climate change through the end of the century.</p> June 08, 2020 - 10:30am Katherine E Kerlin /cilmate/news/californias-climate-refugia-mapping-the-stable-places Lichens Are Losing to Wildfire, Years After Flames Are Gone /climate-science/news/lichen-losing-wildfire-years-after-flames-are-gone <p>As increasingly hot and severe wildfires scorch the West, some lichen communities integral to conifer forests aren’t returning, even years after the flames have been extinguished, according to a study from scientists at the University of California, Davis.</p> August 09, 2018 - 2:44pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate-science/news/lichen-losing-wildfire-years-after-flames-are-gone Tahoe: State of the Lake Report Released /climate/news/tahoe-state-lake-report-released <p>After a year marked by extreme weather and plunging clarity levels, the ٺƵ Tahoe Environmental Research Center today released its annual&nbsp;<a href="http://tahoe.ucdavis.edu/stateofthelake/index.html">Tahoe: State of the Lake Report</a>.</p> <p>The 2018 report summarizes data collected in 2017 as part of the center’s ongoing, decades-long measurement programs, while also presenting current research on emerging issues. &nbsp;</p> July 26, 2018 - 1:25pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/tahoe-state-lake-report-released Tahoe State of the Lake Report Released /news/tahoe-state-lake-report-2016-released <p>The ٺƵ Tahoe Environmental Research Center today released its annual <a href="http://terc.ucdavis.edu/stateofthelake/index.html">Tahoe: State of the Lake Report</a>, assessing a year marked by the hottest temperatures on record followed by a winter of unprecedented levels of rain and snow in the Sierra Nevada mountains, where Lake Tahoe resides.</p> July 27, 2017 - 3:06pm Katherine E Kerlin /news/tahoe-state-lake-report-2016-released How Much Drought Can a Forest Take? /news/how-much-drought-can-forest-take <p>Why do some trees die in a drought and others don’t? And how can we predict where trees are most likely to die in future droughts?</p> <p>Scientists from the University of California, Davis, and colleagues examined those questions in a <a href="http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ele.12711/full">study published in the journal <em>Ecology Letters</em></a><em>. </em>&nbsp;</p> January 19, 2017 - 1:24pm Katherine E Kerlin /news/how-much-drought-can-forest-take What the Ancient CO2 Record May Mean for Future Climate Change /news/what-ancient-co2-record-may-indicate-future-climate-change <p>The last time Earth experienced both ice sheets and carbon dioxide levels within the range predicted for this century was a period of major sea level rise, melting ice sheets and upheaval of tropical forests.</p> <p>The repeated restructuring of tropical forests at the time played a major role in driving climate cycles between cooler and warmer periods, according to a study led by the University of California, Davis and published today in the journal <em>Nature Geoscience</em>.</p> October 24, 2016 - 11:08am Katherine E Kerlin /news/what-ancient-co2-record-may-indicate-future-climate-change