Fire
Droughts make trees dry out and then they become very flammable. So more droughts mean more wildfires breaking out. Fires cam spread very quickly and burn for a long time, destroying forests and homes, public recreation spaces and grasslands. The University of Arizona reported that from 1987 to 2003, seven times more forested land burned in the western United states than during the preceding 17 years, and large fires were four times as frequent. The EPA predicts that if the earth warms another 3.6 degrees F, wildfires in that part of the country will burn four times more land than they currently do.