Rumbling afternoon thundershowers are breaking over the Southwest,
bringing gratitude and sweet relief – not that the region needed much
relieving this year. Bouts of cool, wet weather throughout early summer
helped stave off the conflagrations predicted to erupt
after a dry winter, and by mid-July, most areas had already been
deluged by a full month’s worth of rainfall. In other words, summer
monsoon season has extinguished any lingering fears that 2014 would be a
bad fire year.
But as the Southwest collectively inhales the smell of rain falling
on dry land, parts of the Northwest and Western Canada are bathed in
acrid smoke. Nearly a million acres are burning in Washington and Oregon
alone – more than what typically burns over the course of a whole year.
Some 12,000 firefighters have been deployed since the fires began
earlier this month.
Yet though the deadly combination of drought and summer lightning
strikes have led to a particularly severe fire season in eastern
Washington and Oregon, some of the West’s biggest blazes are in Canada's
Northwest Territories, where the total acreage burned so far this year is six times the
25-year average. In recent years, twice as much Canadian forest has
been burning annually as in the 1970s, says University of Alberta
wildland fire professor Mike Flannigan, and the northwestern part of the
country is experiencing its hottest, driest summer in half a century.
“What we are seeing in the Northwest Territories this year is an
indicator of what to expect with climate change,” Flannigan says...
To read more about what burning boreal forests mean for the environment, click here.
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