Showing 20 articles starting at article 1
Categories: Environmental: Wildfires
Published New gels could protect buildings during wildfires (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Researchers have developed a sprayable gel that creates a shield to protect buildings from wildfire damage. It lasts longer and is more effective than existing commercial options.
Published Action plan to help patients with lung disease cope with wildfire smoke (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
A multidisciplinary team has developed an action plan to help patients with respiratory diseases mitigate the consequences of poor air quality from wildfires.
Published Less severe forest fires can reduce intensity of future blazes (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Low- and moderate-severity forest wildfires can reduce the intensity of future fires, according to new research on 'reburns.'
Published Climate change raised the odds of unprecedented wildfires in 2023-24 (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Unprecedented wildfires in Canada and parts of Amazonia last year were at least three times more likely due to climate change and contributed to high levels of CO2 emissions from burning globally, according to the a new systematic review. The State of Wildfires report takes stock of extreme wildfires of the 2023-2024 fire season (March 2023-February 2024), explains their causes, and assesses whether events could have been predicted. It also evaluates how the risk of similar events will change in future under different climate change scenarios.
Published Canadian wildfires are affecting US air quality and raising health concerns (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Climate-driven wildfire events are rapidly transferring harmful particulate matter containing toxic chemicals over long distances, compromising air quality in the New Jersey and New York City areas, according to recent research.
Published New York City's fireworks display prompts temporary surge of air pollution (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
In 2023, roughly 60,000 firework shells exploded above Manhattan's East River as part of Macy's Fourth of July show. The resulting air pollutant levels were many times higher in the hours after the display than those seen when smoke from a Canadian wildfire had blanketed the area a month before, according to the results of a new study.
Published California a botanical and climate change hot spot (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Climate-driven shifts in California's biodiversity call for innovation and continued environmental stewardfship, says a new study. California's 30x30 Initiative and efforts to harmonize biodiversity with renewable energy are promising steps, while wildfire strategies need to further adapt.
Published Solar absorption by black carbon in fire clouds quantified (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Aerosol scientists quantify the extent of light absorption by black carbon in fire clouds to better model climate impacts of extreme wildfire events.
Published Researchers warn of unprecedented arsenic release from wildfires (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
The wildfire season of 2023 was the most destructive ever recorded in Canada and a new study suggests the impact was unprecedented. It found that four of the year's wildfires in mine-impacted areas around Yellowknife, Northwest Territories potentially contributed up to half of the arsenic that wildfires emit globally each year.
Published Researchers enhance tool to better predict where and when wildfires will occur (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
A newly enhanced database is expected to help wildfire managers and scientists better predict where and when wildfires may occur by incorporating hundreds of additional factors that impact the ignition and spread of fire.
Published Scientists use AI to predict a wildfire's next move (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Researchers have developed a new model that combines generative AI and satellite data to accurately forecast wildfire spread.
Published Wildfire smoke has a silver lining: It can help protect vulnerable tree seedlings (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Forest scientists studying tree regeneration have found that wildfire smoke comes with an unexpected benefit: It has a cooling capacity that can make life easier for vulnerable seedlings.
Published Complex impact of large wildfires on ozone layer dynamics (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
In a revelation highlighting the fragile balance of our planet's atmosphere, scientists have uncovered an unexpected link between massive wildfire events and the chemistry of the ozone layer. Using satellite data and numerical modeling, the team discovered that an enormous smoke-charged vortex nearly doubles the southern hemispheric aerosol burden in the middle stratosphere of the Earth and reorders ozone depletion at different heights. This study reveals how wildfires, such as the catastrophic 2019/20 Australian bushfires, impact the stratosphere in previously unseen ways.
Published Forest carbon storage has declined across much of the Western U.S., likely due to drought and fire (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Forests have been embraced as a natural climate solution, due to their ability to soak up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere as they grow, locking it up in their trunks, branches, leaves, and roots. But a new study confirms widespread doubts about the potential for most forests in the Western US to help curb climate change. The paper analyzed trends in carbon storage across the American West from 2005 to 2019.
Published Wildfires increasingly threaten oil and gas drill sites, compounding potential health risks (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
More than 100,000 oil and gas wells across the western U.S. are in areas burned by wildfires in recent decades, a new study has found, and some 3 million people live next to wells that in the future could be in the path of fires worsened by climate change.
Published Fuel treatments reduce future wildfire severity (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
There is a common belief that prescribed burning, thinning trees, and clearing underbrush reduce risks of the severity of future fires. But is that true? A new project analyzing 40 studies where wildfire burned into different vegetation treatments, spanning 11 western states. Researchers found overwhelming evidence that in seasonally dry mixed conifer forests in the western U.S., reducing surface and ladder fuels and tree density through thinning, coupled with prescribed burning or pile burning, could reduce future wildfire severity by more than 60% relative to untreated areas.
Published Large wildfires create weather that favors more fire (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
A new study shows soot from large wildfires in California traps sunlight, making days warmer and drier than they ought to be.
Published New way to spot beetle-killed spruce can help forest, wildfire managers (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
A new machine-learning system can automatically produce detailed maps from satellite data to show locations of likely beetle-killed spruce trees in Alaska, even in forests of low and moderate infestation where identification is otherwise difficult. The automated process can help forestry and wildfire managers in their decisions. That's critical as the beetle infestation spreads.
Published Fighting fires from space in record time: How AI could prevent devastating wildfires (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
Scientists are getting closer to detecting bushfires in record time, thanks to cube satellites with onboard AI now able to detect fires from space 500 times faster than traditional on-ground processing of imagery.
Published Novel mobile air monitoring technology yields greater insight into post-disaster pollution levels (via sciencedaily.com) Original source
A team has found that high resolution mass spectrometry could be a valuable tool for identifying and assessing air-borne contaminants produced by natural and human-made disasters.