When the Forest Runs Dry — Preparing for a Future of Drought
Drought doesn’t announce itself with sirens or smoke. It creeps in quietly — through months of low rainfall, dry soils, and stressed trees. Yet its impacts can ripple across entire ecosystems and societies.
At SLU, PhD student Emily Viola Delin studies how forests respond to prolonged dry periods and what that means for Sweden’s preparedness in a changing climate. Her work focuses on modeling abiotic disturbances — storms, fires, and especially droughts — to understand how management choices can make forests more resilient to the stresses ahead.
“Drought is sometimes called a slow crisis,” Emily explains. “It develops gradually and often goes unnoticed until the effects are widespread. By the time we see visible signs in forests, the underlying stress has already been building for a long time — which makes early monitoring and preparedness essential.”
What happens when the forest dries out
At the Asa Experimental Forest in southern Sweden, Emily and her colleagues are combining long-term data on soil moisture, tree rings, and water flows to understand how drought shapes forests over decades.
“We’re still in the early stages,” she says. The unique data, however, is already revealing how drought affects forest growth, recovery, and water balance over time.
Even when trees survive, they often emerge weaker — less able to withstand new pressures from storms, pests, or fire. Forest stressors rarely occur in isolation, Emily explains; they interact and amplify each other’s effects. A drought doesn’t simply end when it rains again — it leaves a mark that makes the next disturbance harder to face.
Unlike wildfires or storms, drought isn’t something that can be contained or fought in the moment. “It develops quietly, over weeks or months,” Emily says. “That’s what makes monitoring and proactive planning so critical.”
Preparedness rooted in resilience
For Emily, preparedness isn’t just about response — it’s about resilience.
“Forests teach us that recovery and maintaining function after disturbance are just as important as handling the event itself,” she explains.
By monitoring how often and how severely forests experience drought stress, scientists can identify early warning signals of broader water shortages that could also affect people and agriculture.
The challenge lies in balancing competing water needs among people, ecosystems, and industries. As droughts become more frequent and severe, we’ll need clearer, coordinated plans for how to conserve and distribute water. "It’s not just a forest issue — it’s a societal one," says Emily.
Adapting Like Nature
When forests face drought, they adapt by conserving energy — slowing growth above ground and expanding roots in search of moisture.
“It’s a lesson in resourcefulness,” Emily says. “We can learn from that by being more deliberate about how we use and prioritize our own resources — especially during and between crises.”
As droughts and water stress become more frequent, preparedness will depend on how well we adapt.
The forests of the future may look different, but that diversity will be part of their strength. Both people and trees have an extraordinary capacity to adjust and endure — if we have the knowledge and determination to guide that process. “The actions we take now will determine how resilient we are later,” Emily says.
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Contact
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PersonEmily Viola Delin, PhD StudentSouthern Swedish Forest Research Centre
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PersonTashina Alavi, Communications OfficerSouthern Swedish Forest Research Centre