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Episode 09 - What are the long-term effects of increasing wildfires?

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Manage episode 512355314 series 3612197
Content provided by USask Research Profile and Impact and USask Research Profile. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by USask Research Profile and Impact and USask Research Profile or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Dr. Colin Laroque (PhD) listens to what the trees tell him.

Laroque, a professor in USask’s College of Agriculture and Bioresources and the head of the Department of Soil Sciences, is an expert dendrochronologist. Or, in other words, he is an expert in “tree-ring analysis,” which allows him to read the rings of trees to get a better understanding of the environment over years, decades and centuries.

In recent years, the number of wildfires in Canada and around the world have increased, with more area being burned and more effort being put into dealing with them. As Laroque puts it, the environment is changing, but those changes take long periods of time before they can be understood as trends or a “new normal.”

For Laroque, the questions are not whether or not this more regular and severe wildfire season is here to stay, but whether or not we’ve reached the apex of what this “new normal” looks like for wildfires.

On this episode of the USask Signature Series podcast, we answer the question “What will increasing wildfires do to our environment, and is there anything we can do about it?”

  • Host: Matt Olson
  • Producers: Matt Olson and Leslie-Ann Schlosser
  • Editor: Matt Olson
  • Graphics and Marketing: USask Research Profile and Impact office
  • Original Music created by Silas Friesen

Questions? Email [email protected]
Check out USask research on Instagram, X/Twitter, LinkedIn and on the University of Saskatchewan's web pages!

  continue reading

10 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 512355314 series 3612197
Content provided by USask Research Profile and Impact and USask Research Profile. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by USask Research Profile and Impact and USask Research Profile or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Dr. Colin Laroque (PhD) listens to what the trees tell him.

Laroque, a professor in USask’s College of Agriculture and Bioresources and the head of the Department of Soil Sciences, is an expert dendrochronologist. Or, in other words, he is an expert in “tree-ring analysis,” which allows him to read the rings of trees to get a better understanding of the environment over years, decades and centuries.

In recent years, the number of wildfires in Canada and around the world have increased, with more area being burned and more effort being put into dealing with them. As Laroque puts it, the environment is changing, but those changes take long periods of time before they can be understood as trends or a “new normal.”

For Laroque, the questions are not whether or not this more regular and severe wildfire season is here to stay, but whether or not we’ve reached the apex of what this “new normal” looks like for wildfires.

On this episode of the USask Signature Series podcast, we answer the question “What will increasing wildfires do to our environment, and is there anything we can do about it?”

  • Host: Matt Olson
  • Producers: Matt Olson and Leslie-Ann Schlosser
  • Editor: Matt Olson
  • Graphics and Marketing: USask Research Profile and Impact office
  • Original Music created by Silas Friesen

Questions? Email [email protected]
Check out USask research on Instagram, X/Twitter, LinkedIn and on the University of Saskatchewan's web pages!

  continue reading

10 episodes

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