Skip to main content
See every side of every news story
Published loading...Updated

Season Disruption: Trees Suffer More and More

Summary by rts.ch
A succession of climatic anomalies, with warm and humid spring, long summer droughts and mild winters, is more damaging to trees than isolated weather events, according to a study by the Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research.
DisclaimerThis story is only covered by news sources that have yet to be evaluated by the independent media monitoring agencies we use to assess the quality and reliability of news outlets on our platform. Learn more here.

1 Articles

A succession of climatic anomalies, with warm and humid spring, long summer droughts and mild winters, is more damaging to trees than isolated weather events, according to a study by the Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research.

Think freely.Subscribe and get full access to Ground NewsSubscriptions start at $9.99/yearSubscribe

Bias Distribution

  • There is no tracked Bias information for the sources covering this story.

Factuality Info Icon

To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

Ownership

Info Icon

To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage

rts.ch broke the news on Friday, July 10, 2026.
Too Big Arrow Icon
Sources are mostly out of (0)
News
Feed Dots Icon
For You
Search Icon
Search
Blindspot LogoBlindspotLocal