EACH SUMMER, forests burn. Australia, the Amazon, America’s western states and the Siberian Arctic are particularly susceptible to wildfires. Last year California saw the second largest fire in its history blaze through more than 950,000 acres, an area about the size of Rhode Island. This year the biggest ever fire in New Mexico charred more than 300,000 acres. Wildfires can be devastating for humans, but the scorched landscapes they leave behind are a crucial part of a woodland’s life cycle. What happens after a healthy blaze—and what changes when it becomes uncontrollably large? PREMIUM Smoke rises from trees as a wildfire burns at Los Alerces National Park, in Chubut, Argentina Jan
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