Trees are 'getting shorter due to climate change', study claims
Trees are getting shorter due to with their size dropping drastically over the last century alone, a landmark study has claimed. Increases in the number of wildfires, droughts and insect swarms - along with ongoing human devastation - have shortened the lifespan of majestic oaks, beeches, conifers and other trees. Higher temperatures have also left their mark by stalling photosynthesis, used by plants to create food, leading to more tree deaths. Meanwhile, rising carbon dioxide levels have offered little respite to older trees as they only increase growth in young forests with abundant nutrients and water. Arborists in an international team including the University of Birmingham made the claims after studying records of tree size and land use from across the world. They warned the devastation showed no sign of stopping with forests continuing to be altered into the 'forseeable future'. Forests have already changed, they said, and will likely continue to be altered by the loss of the area and stature of old-growth forests globally. The continuing loss of trees will also make it harder for areas to recover, they said, as there will be fewer new seedlings, less growth and higher mortality among those remaining. The proliferation of managed forests - where trees are cut down early for use as biomass fuel at Christmas and for other uses - could also impact the height of trees worldwide. 'This trend is likely to continue with climate warming,' said lead author and Earth Scientists Dr Nate McDowell. 'A future planet with fewer large, old forests will be very different than what we have grown accustomed to. 'Older forests often host much higher biodiversity than young forests and they store more carbon than young forests.' The University of Birmingham's Dr Tom Pugh said: 'This study reviews mounting evidence that climate change is accelerating tree mortality, increasingly pushing the world's forests towards being both younger and shorter. 'This implies a reduction in their ability to store carbon and potentially shifts in the mix of species that compose and inhabit these forests. 'This is likely to have big implications for the services those forests provide, such as mitigating climate change. 'Increasing rates of tree mortality driven by climate and land-use change, combined with uncertainty in the mix of species that will form the next generation, pose big challenges for conservationists and forest managers alike.' Wind damage and forest harvest were also named among threats to trees. The paper, , was published in Science.