In the summer of 2021, the Pacific Northwest experienced an unprecedented climatic event known as the “heat dome,” which subjected vast forested areas in western Oregon and Washington to extreme heat stress. Scientists at Oregon State University (OSU), in partnership with the U.S. Forest Service, have now unveiled groundbreaking research revealing how this intense heatwave inflicted rapid and widespread damage to forest canopy foliage. Through advanced satellite imagery and remote sensing techniques, the team quantified the extent of foliar scorch and dissected the underlying factors contributing to forest vulnerability under such extreme thermal conditions.
During the peak of this event, temperatures soared to record highs, with Portland hitting 116°F, Salem reaching 117°F, and Lytton, British Columbia, registering an astonishing 121°F—the highest temperature ever recorded in Canadian history. Such sudden and severe thermal stress transformed the forest landscape, causing about 5% of the tree canopy in the region to shift from vibrant green to shades of red and orange, signals of significant damage. This visual transformation was captured within hours, underscoring the immediacy with which extreme temperature perturbations can impair forest vitality.
The researchers’ spatial analysis determined that approximately 293,546 hectares—over 1,000 square miles, an area rivaling the state of Rhode Island—suffered noticeable foliar mortality. This striking scale of damage marks an alarming benchmark in forest health, highlighting how sensitive these ecosystems are to heat extremes. Notably, damaged foliage translates to impaired photosynthesis, a fundamental biological process that powers tree growth and carbon sequestration. Consequently, impaired trees face heightened susceptibility to secondary stressors such as insect infestations and pathogenic diseases, thereby threatening long-term forest stability.
Delving into micro-environmental and ecological contributors to damage severity, the study revealed that specific factors like solar exposure, slope aspect (the cardinal direction a slope faces), and local microclimate conditions significantly influenced damage distribution. Trees positioned on south-facing slopes or areas receiving intense sunlight bore more acute heat stress. Moreover, biological traits such as species composition, stand age, and phenological timing—especially the onset of budburst—played crucial roles in determining how foliage coped with thermal extremes.
Among species, the investigation highlighted iconic coniferous trees like western redcedar, western hemlock, and Sitka spruce as disproportionately affected. These species dominate old-growth stands and possess varying degrees of thermal tolerance. Additionally, the presence of foliar pathogens, particularly the Swiss needle cast fungus in Douglas-fir populations, exacerbated foliar loss by weakening foliage resilience. Such intersecting biotic and abiotic factors illustrate the multifaceted nature of forest responses to climate-induced stressors, emphasizing that susceptibility extends beyond temperature alone.
Forestry ecologist and OSU doctoral graduate Adam Sibley noted the profound implications of these findings, especially as they pertain to ancient, ecologically invaluable Pacific Northwest forests. The immediate foliar mortality observed underlines the possibility that prolonged or more intense heat waves anticipated under climate change scenarios could precipitate even greater canopy dieback, altering forest composition, carbon cycling, and ecosystem services. Such transformations risk undermining the cultural, economic, and environmental benefits these forests provide.
Tree physiologist Chris Still added that the heat dome functioned as an unintended large-scale stress experiment, testing the thermal limits of native tree species in situ. Prior to this, there existed scant historical precedent for heat-induced foliar mortality on such a regional scale. This pioneering study thus furnishes land managers and policymakers with critical spatially explicit data to inform adaptive forest management strategies designed to mitigate future heatwave impacts and safeguard forest resilience in a warming world.
The damage footprint was notably severe in Washington’s Olympic Peninsula, a region encompassing Olympic National Park, a World Heritage Site and International Biosphere Reserve. The park’s old-growth forests, primarily consisting of western hemlock, western redcedar, and Sitka spruce, exhibited extensive foliar scorch. Given the ecological significance and protected status of this area, the findings sound an urgent call for enhanced monitoring and conservation efforts targeting climate vulnerability hotspots within such biodiverse landscapes.
The study also touched upon how heightened heat stress could reduce productivity estimates for plantation forests, ramifications that reverberate beyond ecological concerns to influence regional timber economies. Heat-related foliar loss diminishes photosynthetic capacity and growth rates, potentially impacting timber yield, forest regeneration, and carbon sequestration potential. These outcomes ripple through both natural and managed systems, underscoring the urgency of integrating thermal stress projections into forest management and conservation planning.
Data for this research came from sophisticated imaging analysis, leveraging remote sensing to capture changes in foliar health over time. This technological approach allowed the team to monitor rapid canopy color shifts with fine spatial resolution, paving the way for real-time forestry health assessment during extreme weather events. By integrating remote sensing with ground observations and species-level physiological understanding, the study set a new standard in evaluating forest vulnerability to climate extremes.
In sum, this research elucidates the immediate and sustained impacts of extreme heatwaves on the Pacific Northwest’s forest ecosystems. It delivers a clarion warning about the potential for escalating canopy damage and altered forest dynamics under future warming trends. The comprehensive spatial data and species-specific insights equip resource managers with vital intelligence to devise proactive interventions, ensuring forest ecosystems remain resilient amidst increasing climate volatility.
Moving forward, expanding knowledge about thermal tolerance thresholds across diverse tree species and age classes will be indispensable. Researchers advocate augmenting forest monitoring networks with phenological data collection and pathogen surveillance to capture interactive stress effects. Alongside predictive modeling, such integrated approaches will further unravel complex mortality drivers and support adaptive strategies aligned with evolving climate realities.
This pioneering study, made possible through the collaborative efforts of OSU and multiple scientific partners, was published in the journal Global Change Biology. The research underscores the necessity of prioritizing extreme heat stress within the broader context of forest conservation and climate adaptation policymaking, a critical step for sustaining Pacific Northwest forest landscapes and the myriad ecological functions they perform.
Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: Extreme Heatwave Causes Immediate, Widespread Mortality of Forest Canopy Foliage, Highlighting Modes of Forest Sensitivity to Extreme Heat
News Publication Date: 30-Oct-2025
Web References: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/gcb.70571
References: Published in Global Change Biology, DOI: 10.1111/gcb.70571
Image Credits: Photo by Dave Shaw, OSU College of Forestry
Keywords: heat dome, forest canopy mortality, foliar scorch, Pacific Northwest, extreme heatwave, tree physiological stress, remote sensing, climate change impacts, old-growth forest vulnerability, species thermal tolerance

