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    HomeEnvironmentClimate ChangeCities scramble to find trees that will survive climate change

    Cities scramble to find trees that will survive climate change

    Last fall, I invited a stranger into my yard. 

    Manzanita, with its peeling red bark and delicate pitcher-shaped blossoms, thrives on the dry, rocky ridges of Northern California. The small, evergreen tree or shrub is famously drought-tolerant, with some varieties capable of enduring more than 200 days between waterings. And yet here I was, gently lowering an 18-inch variety named for botanist Howard McMinn into the damp soil of Tacoma, a city in Washington known for its towering Douglas firs, bigleaf maples, and an average of 152 rainy days per year.

    It’s not that I’m a thoughtless gardener. Some studies suggest that the Seattle area’s climate will more closely resemble Northern California’s by 2050, so I’m planting that region’s trees, too.

    Climate change is scrambling the seasons, wreaking havoc on trees. Some temperate and

    Read full article originally published on grist.org

    Grist
    Gristhttps://grist.org
    A nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future.
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