Africa: Climate Change Blamed For Dead Trees
 By Staff Writer
  A new study led by a scientist at the University of California, Berkeley  reveals that trees are dying in the Sahel, a region in Africa south of the  Sahara Desert, and human-caused climate change is to blame. 
  “Rainfall in the Sahel has dropped 20-30 percent in the 20th century, the  world’s most severe long-term drought since measurements from rainfall gauges  began in the mid-1800s,” said study lead author Patrick Gonzalez, who conducted  the study while he was a visiting scholar at UC Berkeley’s Center for Forestry.  “Previous research already established climate change as the primary cause of  the drought, which has overwhelmed the resilience of the trees.”
  The study, which is scheduled for publication Friday, Dec. 16, in the  Journal of Arid Environments, was based upon climate change records, aerial  photos dating back to 1954, recent satellite images and old-fashioned footwork  that included counting and measuring over 1,500 trees in the field. The researchers  focused on six countries in the Sahel, from Senegal in West Africa to Chad in  Central Africa, at sites where the average temperature warmed up by 0.8 degrees  Celsius and rainfall fell as much as 48 percent.
  They found that one in six trees died between 1954 and 2002. In addition,  one in five tree species disappeared locally, and indigenous fruit and timber  trees that require more moisture took the biggest hit. Hotter, drier conditions  dominated population and soil factors in explaining tree mortality, the authors  found. Their results indicate that climate change is shifting vegetation zones  south toward moister areas.
  “In the western U.S., climate change is leading to tree mortality by  increasing the vulnerability of trees to bark beetles,” said Gonzalez, who is  now the climate change scientist for the National Park Service. “In the Sahel,  drying out of the soil directly kills trees. Tree dieback is occurring at the  biome level. It’s not just one species that is dying; whole groups of species  are dying out.”
  The new findings put solid numbers behind the anecdotal observation of the  decline of tree species in the Sahel.
  “People in the Sahel depend upon trees for their survival,” said Gonzalez.  “Trees provide people with food, firewood, building materials and medicine. We  in the U.S. and other industrialized nations have it in our power, with current  technologies and practices, to avert more drastic impacts around the world by  reducing our greenhouse gas emissions. Our local actions can have global consequences.”
  Other co-authors of the study are Compton J. Tucker, senior earth scientist  at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, and Hamady Sy, country representative  for Mauritania at the Famine Early Warning Systems Network.
  Funding from NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey helped support this  research. 



