Green | climate change Climate Change Caused Wildfires Warmer temperatures leave states susceptible to record fires By Neal Colgrass Posted Jul 2, 2012 6:33 PM CDT Copied This Sunday, July 1, 2012, photo, shows burned landscape near the Mountain Shadows area near Colorado Springs, Colo. (AP Photo/The Colorado Springs Gazette, Susannah Kay) Officially, lightning and suspected arson caused Colorado's record wildfires—but scientists say the real culprit is climate change. The science is simple: Warmer temperatures diminish winter snow and kill off spring rain, leaving state land a parched tinder box ready to go up in flames. And Colorado is not alone: “We’ve had record fires in 10 states in the last decade, most of them in the West,” says US agriculture official Harris Sherman. Colorado climate scientists didn't predict these historic fires, but years ago they did warn of hot and dry weather, early springs, and more droughts, the Washington Post reports. Adding to the state's woes are climate beetles that breed faster due to warmer winters; they munch on trees, leaving acres of possible firewood. What's more, Colorado—like neighboring New Mexico—has far too many homes in fire-risk zones. “It’s not a matter of if they burn, but when,” says one expert. Read These Next Game 3 of the World Series took a historically long time to wrap up. Trump has been talking about a White House ballroom for 15 years. Monstrous Hurricane Melissa makes landfall in Jamaica. Amid turmoil at CBS News, a veteran anchor is leaving. Report an error