The common eucalyptus in California is the blue gum, which has adapted to burn itself down and take the rest of the forest with it (the fire climbs the bark into the canopy and ignites the leaves, which are full of flammable oil). It’s understood to be a wildfire hazard out there.
It’s one of the most hilariously insane plant life histories ever. Most plants that exhibit serotiny (cones or seed pods that only open in response to smoke or flame) drop their seeds and wait for a small brushfire to come along and clear out the undergrowth. Blue gums overdo it by keeping their pods in the canopy and actively accelerating any fires that happen so that they’re the only thing left to grow in the ashes.
And of course people took one look at wildfire prone California and thought to themselves “Oh man, we need to plant a ton of these trees here”
Almost all native trees of California are also fire adapted, because we have had large annual wildfires for a long ass time. I obviously can’t tell what kind of trees those are, but this is a common trend with wildfire damage
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The common eucalyptus in California is the blue gum, which has adapted to burn itself down and take the rest of the forest with it (the fire climbs the bark into the canopy and ignites the leaves, which are full of flammable oil). It’s understood to be a wildfire hazard out there.
Holy shit lol
It’s one of the most hilariously insane plant life histories ever. Most plants that exhibit serotiny (cones or seed pods that only open in response to smoke or flame) drop their seeds and wait for a small brushfire to come along and clear out the undergrowth. Blue gums overdo it by keeping their pods in the canopy and actively accelerating any fires that happen so that they’re the only thing left to grow in the ashes.
And of course people took one look at wildfire prone California and thought to themselves “Oh man, we need to plant a ton of these trees here”
Eucalyptus are common in California but they are invasive.
Almost all native trees of California are also fire adapted, because we have had large annual wildfires for a long ass time. I obviously can’t tell what kind of trees those are, but this is a common trend with wildfire damage