In Mexican Mountains, Some Tree Species Could Be Vulnerable to Climate Change

by Laura Oleniacz, North Carolina State University
6/8/2021

A new study found certain species of pine and oaks in the mountains of southwestern Mexico could be more vulnerable to decline as the environment becomes hotter and drier due to climate change.

The findings, published in the journal Ecosphere, will be important as land managers seek to conserve and protect vulnerable species in these forests in Oaxaca, Mexico, and around the world.

“We have pine-oak forests in North Carolina, in the Himalayas, in the Mediterranean and all over the world,” said the study’s first author Meredith Martin, assistant professor of forestry and environmental resources at NC State. “We wanted to get more information about how to manage and regenerate both pine and oak trees, which are both really ecologically and economically important.”

Read more here: https://news.ncsu.edu/2021/06/in-mexican-mountains-some-tree-species-could-be-vulnerable-to-climate-change/

Read the Ecosphere paper: https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ecs2.3475