A wildfire in Yosemite National Park is threatening some of the oldest and most massive trees on the planet, woodlands that have stood since before the founding of Rome. The iconic Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias, visited by a million people every year, is now closed as firefighters battle the Washburn Fire that threatens to engulf it.

What is Mariposa Grove?

This stand of trees on 248 acres is home to more than 500 mature giant sequoia trees. Some of them are estimated to be as much as 3,000 to 3,500 years old. The awe-inspiring Grizzly Giant stands 209 feet tall (more than 15 stories) and is estimated to weigh roughly 2 million pounds. 

The grove has been protected since President Abraham Lincoln first signed legislation setting it aside for public use in 1864.

What’s threatening it?

The Washburn Fire began July 7 and has since burned 2,340 acres in Yosemite National Park, coming perilously close to the grove. There were 545 people fighting the fire Monday, and it was 25% contained, according to the National Park Service. It was zero percent contained on Sunday.

The fire has been so powerful the tremendous updraft from its heat is sucking branches and other debris hundreds of feet into the air. As they fall, they rain down on firefighters and airplanes attacking the blaze.

In one incident on Saturday, a more than 2-foot long tree branch was pulled several hundred feet into the air by the fire, narrowly missing two firefighting aircraft. 

What’s being done to protect the grove?

The National Parks Service has dug fire lines to protect the giant sequoias and is using ground-based sprinkler systems to increase humidity in the area. This requires the fire to expend more energy to burn, so the fire’s intensity drops, said Craig Clements, who directs the Wildfire Interdisciplinary Research Center at San José State University.

Why do giant sequoias matter?

Giant sequoias only grow in a few small areas along the West coast. They are a relic species dating back to before the Jurassic period.

“Continents have shifted, the climate has changed multiple times and still these little pockets have survived,” said Will Russell, a forest ecologist at San José State University. “Unfortunately, it looks like the current pressure of climate change is affecting them in such a way that we might lose them.”

The giant sequoia is now endangered, with only 80,000 estimated to survive given high levels of logging over the past 150 years. Increasingly severe fires threaten those that remain.

“In the fire seasons of 2020 and 2021 alone, a 14-month period, we estimate we lost 19% of all giant sequoia. It’s just not sustainable,” said Joanna Nelson, director of science and conservation at the Save the Redwoods League.