Montana Forests Struggle With Climate Change
GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, MONTANA - SEPTEMBER 17: U.S. Park Service Native Plants Nursery Crew Lead Levi Besaw calms a mule as Animal Packers Jill Michalak and and Jacob Ellis load the animal with gear, supplies and 585 two-year-old whitebark pine seedlings for the journey up to the Mt. Brown Lookout Station September 17, 2019 in Glacier National Park, Montana.
A U.S. Park Service revegetation crew sets out to plant 585 whitebark pine seedlings among the skeletal remains of the forest that burned near the top of the mountain in the 2017 Sprague Creek Fire. With annual average temperatures in Montana rising almost three degrees Fahrenheit since 1950, high elevation tree species like the whitebark pine that were not previously threatened are now facing an increase in blister rust infections, mountain pine beetle infestations and wildfire. A slow-growing species that lives at elevations above 6,000 feet, the whitebark is an essential source of food for many birds and small mammals. (Footage by Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images)





ライセンスの購入
商品の使用用途、使用期間、使用国・地域等の条件に基づいたライセンス。
詳細
クレジット:
報道写真番号:
1181458083
コレクション:
Getty Images News Video
作成日:
2019年09月17日(火)
アップロード日:
ライセンスタイプ:
ライツレディ
リリース情報:
リリースされていません。 詳細情報
クリップの長さ:
00:00:22:26
場所:
Missoula, Montana, United States
マスター:
QuickTime 10-bit ProRes 422 Standard 4K 3840x2160 29.97p
ソース:
Getty Images News Video
オブジェクト名:
mei775413192somodevillamontana075.mov