Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumWildfire Season In The Northeast; Brooklyn Fire Snuffed, But New Jersey Wildfires Burn On
Over the weekend, a very small wildfire broke out in a hilly and densely vegetated area of Prospect Park, a swath of green space in Brooklyn. The 2-acre blaze drew about 100 firefighters as residents were warned to stay out of the park. Meanwhile, on the New York-New Jersey border, another blaze, the Jennings Creek wildfire, has burned thousands of acres, sending smoke drifting across much of New York City and killing an 18-year-old New York state forest ranger volunteer who died while responding to the fire.
Is this typical? Not exactly. But the Northeast has been under severe drought conditions for weeks. These fires, and the dozens of others currently burning in the Northeast and across the Ohio River Valley, as well as the scores more in the Western US, are the consequence of months of unseasonably hot and dry weather across large swaths of the country.
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And then there are these warmer temperatures later in the year that end up amplifying the ongoing droughts worst effects. Temperatures usually fall significantly by November. Trees will drop their leaves and go dormant. Certain critters hibernate or go into low-power mode. Snow begins accumulating in the higher elevations, banking moisture that will melt out gradually during the warmer periods.
But when its 80 degrees in New York in November, trees and vegetation are still consuming water. Theres an extra period of demand on the overall water system, and that taxes water sources lakes and streams begin to draw down and the ground holds onto less moisture. Vegetation that grew earlier in the year begins to dry out and fuel wildfires. It really doesnt take much time to transition to a hot and dry environment and you all of a sudden have all of this extra fuel for wildfires, Fuchs said. This is the perfect mix for fires to blossom.
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https://www.vox.com/climate/384323/drought-new-york-east-coast-wildfires-water
IbogaProject
(3,712 posts)It's way up north on Manhattan, the last old growth forest in NYC, or at least Manhattan.
mountain grammy
(27,343 posts)happened on the front range in 2021 just before Christmas.. Fire season is all year, kind of like the predictions of climate scientists.
Well thank goodness we still control the weather..