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  • 6/19/2025
Wildfires can affect people hundreds of miles away from where they’re burning, with humans far away having to shelter from the smoke riding winds far and wide. Well, a new study has found that trees that are within the path of wildfire smoke act similarly, effectively closing themselves off to the world during periods of smokiness.

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00:00wildfires can affect people hundreds of miles from where they're burning with faraway humans
00:08having to shelter from the smoke which rides winds far and wide well a new study has found
00:12that trees that are within the path of wildfire smoke act similarly effectively closing themselves
00:18off to the world plants like humans have pores in their exteriors called stomata stomata are where
00:23plants take in co2 and release oxygen the opposite of humans however this breathing in and out
00:28happens concurrently in plants as well however during observations in colorado during the 2020
00:33wildfire season experts noticed that when the air was hanging heavy with smoke the plants they were
00:37measuring photosynthesis levels for another study were exhibiting weird behavior in that there was
00:42almost no photosynthesis happening at all and their stomata were completely closed the researchers say
00:47they then conducted a sort of plant cpr clearing the leaves airways by changing the temperature and
00:52humidity levels finding that the plants suddenly began photosynthesis again and producing organic
00:58compounds they say they still aren't sure if the tree is doing this on purpose or if other factors
01:02are at work but that this raises new questions about the long and short-term effects of wildfires on our
01:08planet's forests

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