david street tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

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David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

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Page 1: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

David Street

Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Page 2: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Societal change

Tree rings and….

Water

Fire

Page 3: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Leonardo da Vinci (1500 AD)

“Rings in the branches of sawed trees show the number of years and, according to their thickness, the years which were more or less dry. Thus, they reflect the individual worlds to which they belong, in the north [of Italy] they are much thicker than in the south.”

Aristotle (350 BC)

Page 4: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Andrew Ellicott Douglass 1867-1962Founder of Modern Dendrochronology

& Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research

Page 5: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Environmentally stressful year

Environmentally beneficial years

Page 6: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

But it’s not just counting rings!

False rings Missing Rings

Page 7: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future
Page 8: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

A

B

C

ABC

1900 1910

1920 1930

18901880187018601850

Crossdating: The Basic Principle of Dendrochronology

<<<<<<<“Bridging” back in time<<<<<<<

Page 9: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

What happened to the Anasazi? Why did they leave and where did they go?

Page 10: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future
Page 11: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Excavating specimen HH-39, which “bridged the gap” – Show Low, Arizona, July 22, 1929

floating chronology

living tree chronology

HH-39

1200700 1300 present

}“gap”

Page 12: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

“Secrets of the Southwest Solved by Talkative Tree Rings”, by A. E. Douglass, National Geographic magazine, December 1929

Page 13: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Population estimates from tree-ring dated dwellings indicate nearly total abandonment of the Colorado Plateau by AD 1300, while a major influx of people occurred in northern New Mexico at this time.

From Dean, Doelle, & Orcutt 1994

Page 14: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Water: How variable are our water supplies?

Ex – Colorado River Compact

Page 15: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Tree-rings guide water management

Colorado River at Lees Ferry

Gaged (natural flow) record, 1906-1930

http://treeflow.info/

Colorado River Compact Signed

in 1922

Page 16: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Colorado River at Lees Ferry

Gaged (natural flow) record, 1906-1963

http://treeflow.info/

Tree-rings guide water management

Page 17: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Colorado River at Lees Ferry

Gaged (natural flow) record, 1906-2004

http://treeflow.info/

Colorado River Compact Signed

in 1922

Tree-rings guide water management

Page 18: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Tree-ring reconstructed flow of the Colorado River

(1500 – 2000)

Page 19: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Fire

Page 20: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Fire scars

Tree rings provide a remarkable record of historical fires

Page 21: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Monument Canyon Research Natural Area, Fire Scar Fire History (Don Falk)

Page 22: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Ponderosa Pine

Fire Frequency: HighFire Severity: Low

Page 23: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Fire “thinned” the small trees and kept the forest open

Page 24: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

RAILROADS led to > 5 million sheep and 1.5 million cattle in New Mexico by 1890

Very clearly, the first reason for reduction of widespread surface fires was the introduction very large numbers of sheep, cows and horses.

Page 25: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

After fires stopped the density of the dry conifer forests increased dramatically

Page 26: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Increased forest density and connectivity: = greater risk of large high severity fires

1935 2005

Santa Fe Watershed, New Mexico

Page 27: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Photo: C.D. Allen

Now these dense conifer forests burn high severity

Tree-ring fire histories provide strong evidence in support of reducing forest density and restoring low

severity fire regimes

Page 28: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

“History never repeats itself,

but it does tend to rhyme.” Mark Twain

Page 29: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Tree-ring sampling

Page 30: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Increment cores:

1. tree age

2. climate reconstruction

Page 31: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Ponderosa pine fire history (1296-2004)

18421685

Page 32: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Ponderosa Pine

Fire Frequency: HighFire Severity: Low

Page 33: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Conclusions• Fire historically burned across gradients of elevation, forest types

and fire severity• MC/aspen – mixed severity fire regime with small (<100 ha) stand-

replacing patches immediately adjacent to low severity patches• Spruce - last fire (1685) was largely stand-replacing (1200 ha, 93%

of sampled area), recorded as fire scars throughout the MC and Pipo, and burned during a severe, regional drought (PDSI = - 6.92)

• The drought-fire relationship suggests that if droughts become more frequent and severe, as predicted, the probability of large, severe fire occurrence will increase

Page 34: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future
Page 35: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Is high severity fire a natural part of the Gila Wilderness?

Ellis Margolis

Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona

Tucson, Arizona

Unknown fire, 8/23/2003

Page 36: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Professor Malcolm Hughes

Northern Hemisphere Temperature

Page 37: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Growth release following 1685 fire

Page 38: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Ponderosa pine tree-ring fire history

Page 39: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future
Page 40: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

SW US - precipitation sensitivity

• Water is generally a limiting factor• Narrow ring = less precipitation• Wide ring = more precipitation

Page 41: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

Pipo Fire Scars

Page 42: David Street Tree-rings: records of the past, insights into the future

• Recorded by fire scars at 68% of fire scar plots• Largely stand-replacing in the spruce-dominated forest• Worst drought yr in over 1000 years; PDSI = – 6.92!

(Cook et al 2004)

1685 fire