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Christina Nelson's avatar

Thank you for this interesting piece! One of my concerns with the term is that it's like calling the desert a "wasteland"--it eventually helps justify extractive practices (mining in the desert, clear cutting forests, etc) because these places are now viewed as "useless." While it's catchy to call these areas "zombie forests," public opinion can have a big impact on public policy.

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Evan Frost's avatar

You're entitled to your opinion, but the science supports the finding that type conversions from forest to non-forest are rapidly increasing, largely as a result of warming/drying climate. I agree that rx fire could have been more than mentioned in NYT piece but almost all reporting presents a biased or incomplete view on what is a multi-faceted issue. If you look at the media reporting across the board over the last ~5 yrs, the primary causative factor for altered fire regimes that is most often ignored or downplayed is not suppression/rx fire, but the impact of past (and in many cases, current) logging that reduces fire resiliency and increases potential for intense fire behavior. Saying there are "too many trees" (often true in terms of smaller stems) without also stating there are too few large/old/fire-resistant trees is an example of incomplete reporting.

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