National parks in the United States represent a treasure trove of natural, historical, and recreational landscapes, but their health is at risk. A comprehensive new study on the climate-change vulnerability of national parks, published in Conservation Letters, has found that 77% of America's national park sites are highly vulnerable to climate change. According to the study, most of these parks are at risk of at least one potentially transformational impact, such as fire, drought, pests or diseases or sea-level rise.
Upon first reading this headline, I felt pretty skeptical, but as I started mentally ticking off parks, it seems more likely
Biscayne Bay- ocean acidification, Dry Tortugas and any island parks- sea level rise, Everglades - sea level rise and saltwater intrusion, Congaree - increased hurricanes, Acadia - wildfires, everything out west - desertification, California - forest fires…
They were selected to preserve the climate they contain but it turns out climate change changes climates.