If it is a long term phenomenon reaching a peak vs. short term, it may be
worthwhile to look at what has been happening with precipitation in the
longer term as well.  In general, the southern parts of the state are
getting drier.  Only the northern front range seems to be holding own or
even gaining slightly at this scale, perhaps - but this often includes the
northern mountain counties as well - an absence there may suggest net
precipitation is not the whole story but perhaps increases of extremes in
the fluctuations of it and sensitivity of certain habitats to those
extremes absent manipulations by man in urban areas where we artificially
add water to the system (although we may not be able to continue to do so
much longer) which can lead to extreme events like beetle kill, forest
fires, mismatch of food supply with timing, etc.:

https://www.weather5280.com/2021/07/21/analyzing-colorados-precipitation-trends-over-the-last-125-years

Diana Beatty
El Paso County

On Sat, Jul 24, 2021 at 11:06 AM Robert Righter <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Hi:
>
> David Leatherman in his recent post pointed out detecting movement of
> traditional mountain and foothill species downslope to the plains. This
> phenomena has previously been posted on Cobirds this summer with observers
> commenting on how the mountain species are just not present in the numbers
> they use to be. Recently I was birding in Grand Co. and the sparsity
> of mountain species was impressive, the forests were very quiet.
> One possibly explanation could be since the West has been so dry for quite
> awhile and the abnormally high heat has just sucked the moisture right out
> of the ground dramatically affecting the soil composition and thus
> effecting the health of the forest and consequently it’s bird life?  Any
> other thoughts?
>
> Bob Righter
> Denver CO
>
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old that is strong does not wither, deep roots are not reached by the frost.

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