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Severe Drought, Wildfires Threaten Water Resources
This is Valles Caldera. Actually, it's the giant mouth of a dormant1 super volcano that last erupted 40,000 years ago. In the millennia2 since then, the terrain3 developed high-elevation forests, of abundant water sources and a rich ecosystem4. Today it's a national preserve.
But last year, over 32,000 hectares of forest in Valles Caldera, as well as in several other states of the American southwest, were consumed by the worst wild fires in a century.
"This burned 43,000 acres [17,000 hectares] in 14 hours. To give you a kind of visual on that, a football field with both end zones and bench areas, burns in 2 seconds," noted5 Bob Parmenter, chief scientist at Valles Caldera National Preserve.
Parmenter says there are several reasons for that kind of fire: shorter winters with less snow pack along the Rocky Mountains, where many rivers in the American west originate, as well as longer and warmer summers with less rain.
David Brown, a regional climate director for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric6 Administration (NOAA), says drought is putting heavy stress on water resources.
"One of the most severe droughts in the last 100 years is playing out right now in the southwest," said Brown.
As a result, more than a hundred scientists are working in Valles Caldera in a bid to restore ecological7 balance to the region, through reforestation and water conservation.
The challenges are huge. A study by the U.S. Geological Survey revealed a 30 to 60 percent decline in the Rocky Mountain snow pack. Gregory Pederson, a climate scientist for USGS, participated in the study.
"All the water resources we need to support the societies and ecosystems8 comes primarily from snow. For this neck of the world, most of the water comes from snow pack, 60 to 80 percent," said Pederson.
Data from the last several decades indicate that rivers like the Jemez River have lost 40 percent of their waters.
Trees play an important role in water preservation9, says Bob Parmenter of the Valles Caldera National Preserve:
"The conservative estimate here is that the shading alone increases snow water storage up to 22 percent. As we manage this forest, we can hopefully keep water in the streams as the climate continues to change," added Parmenter.
Parmenter and his team say restoring the forest and the ecosystem in these mountains will help ensure that the region's water resources will survive future droughts and climate change.
The team has begun thinning this forest so wildfires become less likely.
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