The boreal forest is destroyed by fire, and created by it. Flames ravage the forest regularly, leaving a landscape of burnt trees and blackened earth. From this charred ground, new life emerges: plants suited to the scorched terrain, and trees more robust than the aged ones they replace. Fire means renewal in the boreal forest, a central part of the life cycle as ancient as the forest itself.

More on fires

Forest fires map

Spruce budworm

Disturbances chart


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