On the Werner Kurz article, there were two sentences that were directly plagiarized from his employee page. I changed up both so they were no longer the same. Changed "His research focuses on the impacts of natural disturbances, forest management and land-use change on forest carbon budgets." to "Currently, his research focuses on using forest land to its maximum carbon efficiency, reducing the impact of natural disasters, and managing forests." Also changed "leads the development of a National Forest Carbon Accounting System for Canada" to "He is leading the development of an accounting system to assess potential climate change known as the National Forest Carbon Accounting System for Canada." Also, I added a new section on mountain pine beetles since that is his current area of research.
Added new section:
Mountain Pine Beetles[edit | edit source]
editOne subject of Kurz's research is the effect of mountain pine beetles (Dendroctonus ponderosae) on forest ecosystems. His most recent research into this topic is the recent outbreak of mountain pine beetles in the forests of British Columbia. Due to the warmer climate of recent years, the beetles have been able to get to higher latitudes and have less die off during the winter. This has resulted in the largest-ever recorded outbreak of this insect.[2] More than 32 million acres of forest have been killed by this outbreak since 2000. The beetle outbreak affects carbon dioxide emissions in two main ways. First, trees that are destroyed release carbon dioxide when they decompose which increases the levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Second, fewer trees are healthy and able to pull greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere. Research done by Kurz and his team show that if a solution is not found by 2020 the beetles will have killed enough forest to equal five years of carbon dioxide emissions from all the automobiles in Canada. [3]
Added two new references:
- Kurz, Werner. "Making The Paper: Werner Kurz." Nature 452.7190 (2008): x. Environment Index. Web. 14 Sept. 2016.
- Jump up^ Reebs, Stephan. "Six-Legged Agents of Change." Natural History 117.6(2008):14. Academic Search Complete. Web. 14 Sept.2016.
Added two new links: