Why certain naturally occurring wildfires are necessary - Jim Schulz

1,625,704 views ・ 2016-02-02

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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There was a time before our ancestors smashed flint and steel together,
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when they felt the cold lack of fire in their lives.
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But anthropologists theorize that early hominids
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relied on lightning to cause forest fires,
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from which they could collect coals and burning sticks.
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Fire gave them the ability to cook food and clear land,
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and became central in many rituals and traditions.
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So instead of seeing forest fires as an exclusively bad thing,
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ancient humans may have learned to appreciate them.
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Yet, it wasn't just humans who benefitted from these natural phenomena.
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Even as they destroy trees, fires also help the forest themselves,
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however counterintuitive that seems.
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In fact, several forest species, such as select conifers,
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need fire to survive.
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But how can fire possibly create life in addition to destroying it?
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The answer lies in the way that certain forests grow.
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In the conifer-rich forests of western North America,
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lodgepole pines constantly seek the Sun.
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Their seeds prefer to grow on open sunny ground,
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which pits saplings against each other as each tries to get more light
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by growing straighter and faster than its neighbors.
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Over time, generations of slender, lofty lodgepoles
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form an umbrella-like canopy that shades the forest floor below.
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But as the trees' pine cones mature to release their twirling seeds,
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this signals a problem for the lodgepoles' future.
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Very few of these seeds will germintate in the cool, sunless shade
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created by their towering parents.
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These trees have adapted to this problem by growing two types of cones.
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There are the regular annual cones that release seeds spontaneously,
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and another type called serotinous cones,
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which need an environmental trigger to free their seeds.
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Serotinous cones are produced in thousands,
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and are like waterproofed time capsules sealed with resinous pitch.
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Many are able to stay undamaged on the tree for decades.
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Cones that fall to the ground can be viable for several years, as well.
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But when temperatures get high enough, the cones pop open.
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Let's see that in action.
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Once it's gotten started, a coniferous forest fire
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typically spreads something like this.
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Flames ravage the thick understory provided by species like douglas fir,
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a shade-tolerant tree that's able to thrive
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under the canopy of lodgepole pines.
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The fire uses these smaller trees as a step ladder
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to reach the higher canopy of old lodgepole pines.
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That ignites a tremendous crown fire
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reaching temperatures of up to 2400 degrees Fahrenheit.
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That's well more than the 115-140 degrees
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that signal the moment when serotinous seeds can be freed.
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At those temperatures, the cones burst open,
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releasing millions of seeds,
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which are carried by the hot air to form new forests.
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After the fire, carbon-rich soils and an open sunlit landscape
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help lodgepole seeds germinate quickly and sprout in abundance.
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From the death of the old forest comes the birth of the new.
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Fires are also important for the wider ecosystem as a whole.
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Without wildfires to rejuvenate trees, key forest species would disappear,
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and so would the many creatures that depend on them.
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And if a fire-dependent forest goes too long without burning,
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that raises the risk of a catastrophic blaze,
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which could destroy a forest completely,
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not to mention people's homes and lives.
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That's why forest rangers sometimes intentionally start controlled burns
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to reduce fuels in order to keep the more dangerous wildfires at bay.
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They may be frightening and destructive forces of nature,
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but wildfires are also vital
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to the existence of healthy boreal forest ecosystems.
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By coming to terms with that,
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we can protect ourselves from their more damaging effects
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while enabling the forests, like the legendary phoenix,
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to rise reborn from their own ashes.
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