Future climate risks from stress, insects and fire across US forests

Forests are currently a substantial carbon sink globally. Many climate change mitigation strategies leverage forest preservation and expansion, but rely on forests storing carbon for decades to centuries. Yet climate-driven disturbances pose critical risks to the long-term stability of forest carbon. We quantify the climate drivers that influence wildfire and climate stress-driven tree mortality, including a separate insect-driven tree mortality, for the contiguous United States for current (1984-2018) and project these future disturbance risks over the 21st century. We find that current risks are widespread and projected to increase across different emissions scenarios by a factor of >4 for fire and >1.3 for climate-stress mortality. These forest disturbance risks highlight pervasive climate-sensitive disturbance impacts on US forests and raise questions about the risk management approach taken by forest carbon offset policies. Our results provide US-wide risk maps of key climate-sensitive disturbances for improving carbon cycle modeling, conservation and climate policy.

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Related Dataset #1 : Climate risks to carbon sequestration in US forests

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Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2022-06-11T00:00:00
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Metadata Date 2025-07-11T16:02:29.430899
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:25491
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation . (2022). Future climate risks from stress, insects and fire across US forests. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7v69p9p. Accessed 15 January 2026.

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