« FFFT Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next

Re: Scientists sorting out beetle-fire relationship

By: oldCADuser in FFFT | Recommend this post (0)
Sun, 01 Jul 12 9:19 PM | 56 view(s)
Boardmark this board | Food For Further Thought
Msg. 44037 of 65535
(This msg. is a reply to 44036 by clo)

Jump:
Jump to board:
Jump to msg. #

Clo,

That's not what Matt Drudge is reporting.

The other day he ran an item explaining that it was Obama's fault. The basis for this claim is that sometime NEXT YEAR, as a result of Obama 'gutting' the Pentagon's budget, 65 C-130's, which COULD be used as tankers to make aerial firefighting air drops of water. After these 65 30+ year-old aircraft are removed from service there will be just over 300 still flying with the U.S. Air Force and Air Force Reserves. But somehow, in Matt Drudge's head, these 65 YET TO BE DECOMMISSIONED aircraft were already playing a role in causing the wildfires in New Mexico and Colorado to be larger and more destructive then they would have been IF Obama would have NOT asked that NEXT YEARS budget not include money to operate these 65 planes. The article went on to explain that even if the wildfires were not an issue that the planes are going to be needed for the war that we will soon be fighting in our defense of Israel against Iran.




Avatar

OCU


- - - - -
View Replies (1) »



» You can also:
- - - - -
The above is a reply to the following message:
Scientists sorting out beetle-fire relationship
By: clo
in FFFT
Sun, 01 Jul 12 8:41 PM
Msg. 44036 of 65535

Scientists sorting out beetle-fire relationship

By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN Associated Press The Associated Press

Sunday, July 1, 2012 11:31 AM EDT

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — Inside university laboratories and government research facilities across the country, scientists are playing with dozens of variables — mixing and matching and rearranging — to gain a better understanding of what makes wildfire go.

They're busy building computer models as firefighters toil on steep mountainsides to put out more than a dozen new blazes in what has already become a vicious summer of destruction.

Colorado is having its worst fire season in a decade, while New Mexico is recovering from two record fires — one that charred more than 465 square miles and another that destroyed more than 240 homes.

The experts all agree: The dry conditions and strong winds are driving this year's super fires.

So what happens when researchers add to their formulas the devastation caused during the last 15 years by an epidemic of hungry bark beetles? The tiny insects have turned more than 40 million acres of the nation's forests into an unsightly patchwork of red and gray death.

"We've always had bark beetle infestations, but we've never had anything that's been so widespread and spread so quickly," said Tom Tidwell, chief of the U.S. Forest Service. "The only place it's really starting to slow down is just where we're starting to run out of trees."

From Colorado's resort towns of Vail and Aspen to mountain communities in Wyoming, Idaho and Montana, local leaders are worried about fires burning hotter and faster due to the beetle kill.

Some of this year's fires have already burned through areas affected by the native insects, but fire behavior analysts and researchers say the result isn't always a hotter, more severe fire. Sometimes it is.

With the ingredients of topography, fuels and weather always changing, the beetle effect comes partly down to timing. Then there's the species of beetle (there are 15 in the West), the type of trees being attacked and the intensity and rate of tree mortality.

"It just isn't anything that's straight forward," Tidwell said.

much more:
http://start.toshiba.com/news/read.php?rip_id=%3CD9VO6CHO3%40news.ap.org%3E&ps=931


« FFFT Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next