Published: Aug. 21, 2020

Forest fire

Credit: Pixabay

As wildfires rage across Colorado and other parts of the Western U.S., CU Boulder experts are available to discuss these natural disasters. Experts at CU Boulder and theÌýCooperative Institute for Research In Environmental Sciences (CIRES)Ìýhave also on how the wildfires are progressing, the smoke transport in the atmosphere, and impacts to air quality.

Climate change and ecosystemsÌý

Jennifer Balch is the director of CU Boulder’s Earth Lab and can discuss the increasing frequency of wildfires across the country. She has extensively studied the influence of human activity on wildfires in the United States.

Human health

Colleen Reid, assistant professor in the Department of Geography, studies how climate change affects human health, including how air pollution from wildfire smoke influences respiratory health.

Air quality and climateÌý

is the associate director for science at . She’s an atmospheric scientist who studies wildfires and the impacts of their emissions on air quality and climate.Ìý

Research news

A new CU Boulder-led study offers an unprecedented glimpse of what our beloved forests will look like in a few decades, suggesting that when forests burn across the Southern Rocky Mountains, many will not grow back and will instead convert to grasslands and shrublands.Ìý

People are starting almost all the wildfires that threaten U.S. homes, according to an . Through activities like debris burning, equipment use and arson, humans were responsible for igniting 97 percent of home-threatening wildfires between 1992 and 2015, a CU Boulder-led team reported recentlyÌýin the journal Fire. Lead authorÌýNathan MietkiewiczÌýconducted the research as a postdoc in the Earth Lab, part of CIRES at CU Boulder.Ìý

are spiking to levels significantly higher than scientists expected, driving increased ozone pollution and harming air quality, according to a new study co-led by CU Boulder.Ìý

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