As wildfires in California erupted, concerns have been raised about how the United States has approached climate change and how that has affected the severity of the fires.
The Palisades and Eaton fires rank in the top three as the most destructive California wildfires, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, covering more than 37,000 acres combined since Jan. 7.
The newest threat, the Hughes fire, began Wednesday, burning about 10,000 acres; however, neither of the three fires have been fully contained.
The Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment reported an increase in temperature by 2.5 degrees Fahrenheit since 1895.
Lecturer for the UTRGV School of Earth, Environmental and Marine Sciences Gene Paull explained the climate has become unstable, so this caused the rapid vegetation growth.
While the cause of the firestorms remain under investigation, the observable changes in weather, such as heat waves and the lack of precipitation, have led scientists to believe this created fire conditions to burn hotter and more intensely.
Associate Professor for the UTRGV School of Earth, Environmental and Marine Sciences Christopher Gabler said when temperatures are warmer, the region will evaporate moisture, causing things to become drier.
He added a big part of climate change is climate volatility and more energy in the atmosphere.
Vegetation management is used to remove unwanted plants to decrease the likelihood of a hazard, but Gabler said the method is costly.
He added humans naturally do not want things to burn, so this has caused fire suppression, and places that would normally burn every decade have not burned for up to 70 years or less.
Professor for the UTRGV School of Earth, Environmental and Marine Sciences Alejandro Fierro-Cabo said warmer temperatures tend to have a higher capacity of the atmosphere to take in moisture, meaning plant vegetation dries faster and is drier than before.
Paull said California residents like to live near foothills and canyons, places where vegetation is, making large populations vulnerable to the fires.
As the climate has changed, animal range shift occurs, which is when a species moves to a new area or leaves one due to unfavorable environment conditions. Gabler explained this is an indirect effect of climate change, and said insects that are pests on wood have spread and become more active in forests.
Gabler said the wildfires are in an ecological hotspot and have caused a major loss in biodiversity as forests are being destroyed. Species who were rare may now be endangered or if they were not rare before may be threatened. These species who were already stressed by human development and climate change are now facing another stressor caused by wildfires.
He added biodiversity is the engine for an ecosystem to function, but with reduced biodiversity going forward, systems will be less resilient and not as functional.
Because humans are part of nature, Gabler said people have to work with nature and recognize its natural limits.
Cabo said people often forget that climate change deals with human alterations of the global carbon cycle. He explained humans are changing the carbon in the atmosphere to the form of greenhouse gases, which are more prominent in the Earth now than before the Industrial Revolution.
He said the problem arises when humans pump out fuels and burn them, which converts the carbon into greenhouse gases, adding those gases to the atmosphere that was not originally there before, affecting photosynthesis, respiration and the climate.
Gabler said the release of greenhouse gas emissions has contributed to climate change patterns and is a direct result of human activity that has contributed to the extreme wildfires. Although the proposals of cutting down on emissions have been tossed around, the likelihood of seeing change in a short amount of time is unrealistic due to the fact that the climate limits have been pushed so much. He said it may take several years to see any change.
Paull said avoiding the discussion of climate change does not help. Unless there is a concerted worldwide effort, the effects of climate change will keep persisting.
The World Resources Institute shows that the U.S. is second to China in greenhouse gas emitters. President Donald Trump has signed an executive order directing the United States to withdraw from the Paris Agreement, a treaty that was adopted by almost all nations in 2015 to combat the negative effects of climate change.
The agreement aims to “reduce global greenhouse gas emissions to hold global temperature increase to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels,” as per the United Nations.
Even if this executive order does provide some economic benefit, Gabler said it would be short lived because the longterm cost of climate change is greater.
To make a donation to the California wildfire victims, visit the Disaster Relief Donation Page.
This is Victoria Gonzalez for Vaquero Radio.