1 00:00:00,500 --> 00:00:05,500 (bright music) (birds chirp) 2 00:00:09,720 --> 00:00:11,760 - [Narrator] Stretching across the top of our planet 3 00:00:11,760 --> 00:00:13,830 like a verdant, green crown, 4 00:00:13,830 --> 00:00:17,640 the boreal forest is Earth's largest forested biome. 5 00:00:17,640 --> 00:00:20,910 Home to moose, wolf, caribou, bear, 6 00:00:20,910 --> 00:00:22,710 and countless other species, 7 00:00:22,710 --> 00:00:26,100 this vast wilderness of spruce, fir, and pine 8 00:00:26,100 --> 00:00:28,800 holds more than a third of the world's forests 9 00:00:28,800 --> 00:00:31,110 and stores massive amounts of carbon, 10 00:00:31,110 --> 00:00:33,750 helping regulate our global climate. 11 00:00:33,750 --> 00:00:36,570 But this forested frontier is changing, 12 00:00:36,570 --> 00:00:40,650 and, for years, scientists could only theorize about how. 13 00:00:40,650 --> 00:00:42,900 The Earth's system is complex and dynamic, 14 00:00:42,900 --> 00:00:44,190 with feedback mechanisms 15 00:00:44,190 --> 00:00:47,070 that can drive positive and negative outcomes. 16 00:00:47,070 --> 00:00:49,650 - For decades, there have been 17 00:00:49,650 --> 00:00:52,290 ecological and climatological models 18 00:00:52,290 --> 00:00:54,750 that have theoretically predicted 19 00:00:54,750 --> 00:00:58,140 that the boreal forest, given climate change, 20 00:00:58,140 --> 00:01:00,240 should be moving north. 21 00:01:00,240 --> 00:01:02,460 - [Narrator] Previous studies provided hints: 22 00:01:02,460 --> 00:01:04,950 regional evidence, indirect measurements, 23 00:01:04,950 --> 00:01:09,330 but the boreal forest changes slowly, very slowly. 24 00:01:09,330 --> 00:01:11,190 To truly see what's happening, 25 00:01:11,190 --> 00:01:13,590 you'd need to watch the entire forest 26 00:01:13,590 --> 00:01:16,170 continuously for decades. 27 00:01:16,170 --> 00:01:19,350 So how could researchers possibly test this hypothesis 28 00:01:19,350 --> 00:01:21,690 at such a massive scale? 29 00:01:21,690 --> 00:01:23,430 Enter Landsat: 30 00:01:23,430 --> 00:01:27,120 NASA's longest running earth observation program. 31 00:01:27,120 --> 00:01:27,953 For the first time, 32 00:01:27,953 --> 00:01:30,930 scientists could analyze the entire boreal forest 33 00:01:30,930 --> 00:01:33,540 using the complete Landsat archive. 34 00:01:33,540 --> 00:01:36,990 - This study is the first and only study 35 00:01:36,990 --> 00:01:41,990 to comprehensively study the entire boreal forest 36 00:01:42,060 --> 00:01:44,400 from 1984 to 2020, 37 00:01:44,400 --> 00:01:48,660 using 224,000 Landsat images, 38 00:01:48,660 --> 00:01:53,400 mapping the tree cover in every pixel, 30-meter resolution, 39 00:01:53,400 --> 00:01:55,170 and then testing whether or not 40 00:01:55,170 --> 00:01:58,050 the boreal forest is moving north. 41 00:01:58,050 --> 00:02:01,230 - [Narrator] The research team, led by NASA and terraPulse, 42 00:02:01,230 --> 00:02:03,240 calibrated Landsat satellite data 43 00:02:03,240 --> 00:02:06,570 using NASA's airborne field campaign lidar measurements 44 00:02:06,570 --> 00:02:07,890 and commercial images 45 00:02:07,890 --> 00:02:09,540 to create the most accurate map 46 00:02:09,540 --> 00:02:12,270 of boreal tree cover ever produced. 47 00:02:12,270 --> 00:02:15,480 They then tracked changes in every 30-meter pixel, 48 00:02:15,480 --> 00:02:18,150 an area about the size of a baseball diamond, 49 00:02:18,150 --> 00:02:19,770 across 36 years, 50 00:02:19,770 --> 00:02:22,620 in the entire circumboreal region. 51 00:02:22,620 --> 00:02:24,570 The scope is staggering, 52 00:02:24,570 --> 00:02:27,060 analyzing the complete northern forest belt 53 00:02:27,060 --> 00:02:31,320 spanning Alaska, Canada, Scandinavia, and Russia. 54 00:02:31,320 --> 00:02:35,850 - The study's groundbreaking just in its sheer scope. 55 00:02:35,850 --> 00:02:39,000 The longest record, the highest resolution. 56 00:02:39,000 --> 00:02:41,610 Data were calibrated using lidar. 57 00:02:41,610 --> 00:02:44,820 I mean, just every resource was thrown at this study 58 00:02:44,820 --> 00:02:47,580 to get the final, definitive answer. 59 00:02:47,580 --> 00:02:49,260 - [Narrator] And the answer is clear: 60 00:02:49,260 --> 00:02:52,350 the boreal forest is shifting north. 61 00:02:52,350 --> 00:02:54,960 Between 1985 and 2020, 62 00:02:54,960 --> 00:02:57,600 the forest's median latitude moved northward 63 00:02:57,600 --> 00:03:02,600 by 0.43 degrees, roughly 60 kilometers. 64 00:03:02,610 --> 00:03:04,020 The forest also expanded 65 00:03:04,020 --> 00:03:09,020 by 844,000 square kilometers, a 12% increase. 66 00:03:09,180 --> 00:03:10,680 And it's getting denser, 67 00:03:10,680 --> 00:03:14,040 with tree cover increasing across most latitudes. 68 00:03:14,040 --> 00:03:17,280 - What we found is that the forest is getting denser 69 00:03:17,280 --> 00:03:19,590 across most latitudes. 70 00:03:19,590 --> 00:03:22,980 At the very southern edge of the boreal forest, 71 00:03:22,980 --> 00:03:25,440 there are a couple slices, latitudinal slices, 72 00:03:25,440 --> 00:03:29,100 where the the net change of the forest is being lost. 73 00:03:29,100 --> 00:03:32,340 But the pattern of those losses 74 00:03:32,340 --> 00:03:35,340 is pretty consistent over time, 75 00:03:35,340 --> 00:03:38,940 and those changes within latitude across time 76 00:03:38,940 --> 00:03:43,940 aren't really changing as much as the growth. 77 00:03:43,950 --> 00:03:45,870 - [Narrator] The boreal forest's northward shift 78 00:03:45,870 --> 00:03:47,370 affects everything, 79 00:03:47,370 --> 00:03:49,380 from managing fuel load fire risk 80 00:03:49,380 --> 00:03:52,740 to industrial operations of timber, oil, and mining, 81 00:03:52,740 --> 00:03:56,730 extracting resources across North America and Eurasia. 82 00:03:56,730 --> 00:03:58,620 It changes wildlife habitats 83 00:03:58,620 --> 00:04:01,560 and the forest's ability to store carbon. 84 00:04:01,560 --> 00:04:04,260 The expanding forest is also getting younger, 85 00:04:04,260 --> 00:04:05,520 with fast-growing trees 86 00:04:05,520 --> 00:04:07,440 that could sequester additional carbon 87 00:04:07,440 --> 00:04:08,820 if allowed to mature, 88 00:04:08,820 --> 00:04:12,870 a potential positive outcome of warming and climate benefit. 89 00:04:12,870 --> 00:04:15,390 Yet other factors could drive negative outcomes, 90 00:04:15,390 --> 00:04:17,880 which requires additional studies. 91 00:04:17,880 --> 00:04:22,880 - The boreal forest is poised for a major transition. 92 00:04:22,890 --> 00:04:24,450 Permafrost is thawing. 93 00:04:24,450 --> 00:04:26,880 The forest composition is changing. 94 00:04:26,880 --> 00:04:28,230 All of these things can lead 95 00:04:28,230 --> 00:04:30,810 to an abrupt shift in the ecosystem 96 00:04:30,810 --> 00:04:33,420 from one type to a completely different type. 97 00:04:33,420 --> 00:04:37,320 With shorter term or less calibrated data, 98 00:04:37,320 --> 00:04:39,000 we can see abrupt changes. 99 00:04:39,000 --> 00:04:42,720 But with the long-term, highly calibrated Landsat data, 100 00:04:42,720 --> 00:04:44,340 we can see the slow changes. 101 00:04:44,340 --> 00:04:46,290 It makes it sort of a canary in the coal mine. 102 00:04:46,290 --> 00:04:47,790 It's a slow canary, 103 00:04:47,790 --> 00:04:50,100 but if we have the long-term, 104 00:04:50,100 --> 00:04:53,130 high-resolution, highly calibrated data, 105 00:04:53,130 --> 00:04:55,290 which Landsat gives us, 106 00:04:55,290 --> 00:04:58,290 then we can listen to its song. 107 00:04:58,290 --> 00:04:59,580 - [Narrator] This research represents 108 00:04:59,580 --> 00:05:01,320 the most comprehensive analysis 109 00:05:01,320 --> 00:05:04,200 of boreal forest change ever conducted, 110 00:05:04,200 --> 00:05:07,380 made possible by decades of Landsat observations 111 00:05:07,380 --> 00:05:11,612 and NASA's commitment to understanding our changing planet. 112 00:05:11,612 --> 00:05:14,286 (light upbeat music)