Skip to main content

Helsinki, Finland | AFP

Staggering numbers of dead pine trees have been reported in southern Finland this summer, with researchers linking the phenomenon to climate change, they told AFP on Friday.

Over 1,350 patches of dead pine trees have been reported in southwestern Finland since April, when researchers started collecting observations from the public.

“Every day we receive more in our mapping service,” Turku University geography professor Risto Kalliola told AFP.

He described the phenomenon as a “local mass-death of patches of pine trees”.

Most affected were rocky coastal areas with barren soil easily exposed to drought, he said.

Browned groups of dead pines suddenly started to appear along Finland’s southern coast a few years ago, and researchers are now trying to find out the cause of the phenomenon.

“Something is happening in our nature and we have to take it seriously,” Kalliola said.

Similar deaths of pine trees have also occurred in other northern European countries, including neighbouring Sweden.

“What is new in Finland is that this phenomenon has quite recently begun to be common,” he said.

He believed several factors could be causing the local die-offs, such as insect pests and fungal diseases — all exacerbated by global warming.

“During warm summers with heatwaves and weeks without rain, those trees which are growing in vulnerable places start to suffer and their ability to defend themselves against pathogens weakens,” he said.

Kalliola said the exceptionally warm summer in Finland this year had stressed the trees.

“The less available water in the soil the trees can suck up with their roots, the less they can withstand heatwaves and drought,” he said.

ank/po/fg

© Agence France-Presse

Source: AFP
Featured image credit:
Vincent Guth | Unsplash

EU greenhouse gas emissions saw ‘huge’ drop in 2023
EU greenhouse gas emissions saw ‘huge’ drop in 2023News

EU greenhouse gas emissions saw ‘huge’ drop in 2023

By Emma CHARLTON with Camille BAS-WOHLERT in Copenhagen | AFP Brussels, Belgium - Greenhouse gas emissions in the EU fell by eight percent in 2023…
SourceSourceOctober 31, 2024 Full article
Amazon forest loses area the size of Germany and France, fueling fires
Satellite Image: Fires in Brazil
Amazon forest loses area the size of Germany and France, fueling firesNews

Amazon forest loses area the size of Germany and France, fueling fires

By Lucia LACURCIA | AFP Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - The Amazon rainforest has lost an area about the size of Germany and France combined…
SourceSourceSeptember 24, 2024 Full article
New carbon storage technology is fastest of its kind
Illustration: Carbon Storage
New carbon storage technology is fastest of its kindScience

New carbon storage technology is fastest of its kind

By The University of Texas at Austin | The Cockrell School of Engineering A new way to store carbon captured from the atmosphere developed by…
SourceSourceJuly 9, 2024 Full article