(Press-News.org) A new study, led by federal agencies in collaboration with the University of Colorado Denver, shows that the whitebark pine tree—an iconic, high-elevation tree that stretches from California’s Sierra Nevada through the Cascades and Rockies and into Canada—could lose as much as 80 percent of its habitat to climate change in the next 25 years.
The loss could have a cascade of effects, impacting wildlife and people.
The threatened whitebark pine tree is a crucial food source for squirrels and grizzly bears. It also acts as a natural snow fence, holding snowpack in place and releasing meltwater slowly throughout the summer. That runoff supports entire watersheds, which farmers and ranchers depend on. The nearest whitebark pine to us in Colorado is in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem in Wyoming.
“Whitebark pine supports biodiversity, and it helps people too,” said Diana Tomback, PhD, professor at the University of Colorado Denver. “The canopies act as a snow fence and slow snowmelt, enabling summer water flow, which farmers and ranchers depend on.”
The potential loss of whitebark pine habitat with climate warming is the focus of a study Tomback co-authored and which appeared earlier this month in the journal Environmental Research Letters.
A Shrinking Range
Using U.S. Forest Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service data, Tomback and her colleagues modeled how rising temperatures could shift the tree’s growth range across roughly 56 million acres in the U.S.
“Even using a conservative model where the temperature increases 2 degrees, we’re looking at about an 80% loss of range,” Tomback said. “That means whole communities will lose their whitebark pine forests.”
The areas where whitebark pine is projected to survive are mostly in public lands, especially Wilderness Areas and national parks. While that shields them from development, it also limits the kinds of interventions allowed to help the species recover.
A Tree Under Attack
The whitebark pine is unlike any other tree on the threatened and endangered species list. It has the largest range and a unique partnership with the Clark’s nutcracker bird, which buries the tree’s seeds in soil—effectively planting the next generation. Without the bird, the seeds cannot spread.
Tomback discovered this relationship in the late 1970s and is now recognized as a national expert. But the tree species faces multiple threats: hotter temperatures, invasive blister rust disease, increasing wildfires, and mountain pine beetle outbreaks, which have killed many pine trees across the West.
Research and New Approaches to Conservation
To map the tree’s future, the research team used publicly available U.S. Forest Service plot data collected between 2007 and 2021 and climate variables from TopoTerra models. Their models produced detailed maps that can guide conservation efforts by pinpointing where the tree is most likely to persevere.
At the same time, CU Denver is also helping pioneer a minimally intrusive and cost-effective way to help restore trees in wilderness areas that mimics the Clark’s nutcracker method of burying a small number of whitebark pine seeds (caches) throughout an area. Tomback, and graduate student Abbigail King, have been working with the non-profit American Forests and the Bureau of Land Management to pilot a program in Idaho that aims to help with reforestation. If successful, the technique holds much promise because it is one of the few acceptable restoration techniques for designated wilderness areas, including some national parks.
American Forests’ collaborator on the project is CU Denver alum Elizabeth Pansing, who completed her PhD in Tomback’s lab working part on this problem.
“We’re still in the early stages of research to see if this technique will work,” King said. “I love that the field work I’m doing may be able to contribute to the regeneration of this tree and through that the other species that depend on it.”
The People Behind the Work
Other co-authors on the published study are: Sean A Parks, Kira L. Hefty, Jaclyn F. Rushing, Sara A. Goeking, Sharon M. Hood, J. Christopher Toney, Michèle R. Slaton, Benhamin S. Soderquist from the USDA Forest Service; Destin L. Harrell and James Lindstrom from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service; Cameron E. Naficy from the Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society at Oregon State University; and E.J. Taylor from the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research at the University of Arizona, Tucson. Sean Parks is an ecological modeler with the USDA Forest Service Aldo Leopold Wilderness Institute in Missoula, MT,
Tomback joined CU Denver in 1981. She is a professor of integrative biology with expertise in evolutionary ecology, with application to forest ecology and conservation biology. She has a master’s degree in zoology from UCLA and a PhD in biological sciences from UC Santa Barbara. She has published more than 150 articles and presented at dozens of conferences. She is an AAAS fellow and her work with whitebark pine led to its inclusion as a threatened species in 2023, listed under the Endangered Species Act. Tomback together with several colleagues started the Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation, a 501 (c)(3) non-profit based in Missoula, MT. The foundation is dedicated to the restoration of whitebark pine ecosystems and educating the public and resource management agencies about the importance of this pine. She has served as volunteer director of this organization for 17 years and now serves as Policy and Outreach Coordinator.
About the University of Colorado Denver
Millions of moments start at CU Denver, a place where innovation, research, and learning meet in the heart of a global city. We’re the state’s premier public urban research university with more than 100 in-demand, top ranked bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degree programs. We partner with diverse learners—at any stage of their life and career—for transformative educational experiences. Across seven schools and colleges, our leading faculty inspires and works alongside students to solve complex challenges and produce impactful creative work. As part of the state’s largest university system, CU Denver is a major contributor to the Colorado economy, with 2,000 employees and an annual economic impact of $800 million. To learn more about how CU Denver helps learners meet their moment, visit ucdenver.edu.
END
Climate change could erase 80% of whitebark pine’s current habitat across the Rockies and Northwest
What that means for bears, birds, farmers, and ranchers
2025-09-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
FAU engineers develop smarter AI to redefine control in complex systems
2025-09-23
A new artificial intelligence breakthrough developed by researchers in the College of Engineering and Computer Science at Florida Atlantic University offers a smarter, more efficient way to manage complex systems that rely on multiple decision-makers operating at different levels of authority.
This novel framework, recently published in IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics: Systems, could significantly impact the future of smart energy grids, traffic networks and autonomous vehicle systems – technologies that are becoming increasingly central to daily life.
In many real-world systems, decisions ...
Meditation to treat depression and gaming addiction
2025-09-23
Mindfulness meditation may help people struggling with concurrent depression and Internet gaming disorder, according to a study. Guang-Heng Dong and colleagues treated 59 people with depression and Internet gaming disorder (IGD)—which is characterized by excessive and dysregulated video game playing. About a third of people struggling with IGD also suffer from depression. For some, gaming becomes the only way to feel pleasure in an otherwise painful or colorless world. Of the 59 participants, 27 engaged in progressive muscle relaxation ...
Predicting evolution in cell populations with a scaling law
2025-09-23
A scaling law relates the expected number of mutants to the total population size of cells in a spatially constrained but growing population, which could help clinicians predict when cancers or bacterial infections might develop resistance to treatment. Given a small number of cells in a population subject to a strong fitness pressure, such as a drug intended to kill the cells, mutations are likely to arise. However, it is difficult to predict when those mutations might arise and become common in ...
Beyond the Spread: A Scientific Playbook for Forex Execution and Risk
2025-09-23
Foreign exchange (FX) is often described as the world’s deepest and most liquid marketplace, but beneath the headline numbers lies a complex microstructure that shapes how prices form, how liquidity concentrates, and how risk truly behaves across time. At its core, forex is a decentralized, quote-driven market where tiered participants—interbank dealers, non-bank liquidity providers, prime brokers, hedge funds, corporates, and retail aggregators—interact across electronic communication networks and single-dealer platforms. Price discovery unfolds through a constant negotiation of bid–ask quotes, with top-of-book spreads reflecting not only raw competition among market makers but also inventory constraints, latency advantages, and anticipated information flow.
A new comprehensive safety assessment framework for liquid hydrogen storage systems in UAVs
2025-09-23
Aviation accounts for approximately 12% of global carbon dioxide emissions. With intensifying climate change and environmental issues, the aviation industry is searching for greener propulsion systems. For unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), which have wide applications in military, logistics, and agriculture, research has turned towards hydrogen propulsion systems. Hydrogen is a clean fuel that produces only water during combustion, representing a promising alternative to conventional fossil fuels.
However, hydrogen has low volumetric energy density, meaning larger volumes are required to produce the same energy as conventional ...
Study: 72% of Illinois wetlands no longer protected by federal Clean Water Act
2025-09-23
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Illinois once harbored more than 8 million acres of wetlands. By the 1980s, all but 1.2 million wetland acres had been lost, filled in for development or drained to make way for agriculture. Now, thanks to a 2023 Supreme Court decision, roughly 72% of the remaining 981,000 acres of Illinois wetlands are no longer protected by the federal Clean Water Act, putting communities at risk of losing the flood control, groundwater recharge, water purification and natural habitat these wetlands provide, researchers report.
A patchwork of state and county-level wetland regulations offer some protection ...
More than a reflex: How the spine shapes sex
2025-09-23
For decades, it was thought that while the brain orchestrated male sexual behaviour – arousal, courtship, and copulation – the spinal cord merely executed the final act: ejaculation. But a study from the Champalimaud Foundation (CF) challenges that tidy division. It reveals that a key spinal circuit is not only involved in ejaculation but also in arousal and shaping the choreography of sex, adding a surprising new dimension to our understanding of sexual behaviour in mammals.
“The spinal cord isn’t just a passive relay station executing brain commands”, says Susana Lima, Principal Investigator of CF’s ...
Famous IVF memoir had hidden ghostwriter who spun breakthrough into emotional quest, archives reveal
2025-09-23
Previously unseen documents show how a poet performed a major ghostwriting job on the autobiography of the two British pioneers behind the world’s first “test-tube baby”, so that the book used emotional storytelling to aid public acceptance of a controversial medical technology.
A Matter of Life, coauthored in 1980 by geneticist Robert Edwards – who spent much of his career at Cambridge and went on to win the Nobel Prize – and gynaecologist Patrick Steptoe, tells how their research led to in vitro fertilisation (IVF). The book is the basis ...
New study reveals critical gap: 45% of experienced professionals lack structured decision-making habits despite high confidence in their own skills
2025-09-23
ZURICH, SWITZERLAND – September 23, 2025 – A groundbreaking study by the Global Association of Applied Behavioural Scientists (GAABS) has uncovered a troubling disconnect between professionals' confidence in their decision-making abilities and their actual preparedness. While 91% of experienced professionals believe they have above-average decision-making skills, nearly half (45%) lack structured decision habits when making important workplace decisions.
The research, representing GAABS' first major empirical study, surveyed 105 professionals across multiple sectors and revealed widespread ...
Montana State alumnus discovers new, extinct crocodyliform in Montana
2025-09-23
By Diana Setterberg, MSU News Service
BOZEMAN – About 95 million years ago, a juvenile crocodyliform nicknamed Elton lived in what is now southwest Montana at the edge of the Western Interior Seaway.
Measuring no more than 2 feet long from nose to tip of tail, young Elton was about the size of a big lizard, according to Montana State University professor of paleontology David Varricchio. Had it lived to be full grown, Elton would have measured no longer than 3 feet, far smaller than most members of the Neosuchia clade to which it and its distant relatives belong. ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Designing materials for next-generation propulsion systems
European colonizers altered the genetic ancestry of Indigenous peoples in southern Africa
Tracking the evolution of Taylor Swift’s dialect
International team publishes framework for study of ‘Earth engineers’
Applied Microbiology International joins forces with microbiology leaders to launch Global Climate Change Strategy
Running dry – a new study warns of extreme water scarcity in the coming decades
How cell cycle status affects aging cell response to senolytic drugs
JMIR Publications and Iowa State University partner for unlimited OA publishing
Molecular breast imaging may benefit women with dense breasts
Singapore and Denmark pioneer sustainable cooling for megacities, supported by US$9.4 million from Grundfos Foundation
Air pollution is harming children’s eyesight - study
Study of glaciers in the Andes sheds light on future climate impact
Climate change could erase 80% of whitebark pine’s current habitat across the Rockies and Northwest
FAU engineers develop smarter AI to redefine control in complex systems
Meditation to treat depression and gaming addiction
Predicting evolution in cell populations with a scaling law
Beyond the Spread: A Scientific Playbook for Forex Execution and Risk
A new comprehensive safety assessment framework for liquid hydrogen storage systems in UAVs
Study: 72% of Illinois wetlands no longer protected by federal Clean Water Act
More than a reflex: How the spine shapes sex
Famous IVF memoir had hidden ghostwriter who spun breakthrough into emotional quest, archives reveal
New study reveals critical gap: 45% of experienced professionals lack structured decision-making habits despite high confidence in their own skills
Montana State alumnus discovers new, extinct crocodyliform in Montana
Lactate IV infusion found to trick the body into releasing a hormone behind that post-workout brain boost
How a blood test can aid spinal cord injury recovery
Bio-based nanocellulose aerogels offer sustainable thermal insulation with fire safety
Steel sludge transformed into powerful water cleaner for antibiotic pollution
Global farmlands face hidden risks from “forever chemicals” PFAS
The Lancet: Experts outline healthcare, policy, and social changes needed to make the most of Alzheimer’s treatment breakthroughs
6 in 10 US music fans say they have been sexually harassed/assaulted at a live gig, survey suggests
[Press-News.org] Climate change could erase 80% of whitebark pine’s current habitat across the Rockies and NorthwestWhat that means for bears, birds, farmers, and ranchers