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Maple Syrup May Be Climate Change's Next Casualty and We’re Not OK

Two decades’ worth of forest data shows climate change is hurting sugar maples — and syrup production — in the U.S.

Maple Syrup May Be Climate Change's Next Casualty and We’re Not OK
Chocolate chip pancakes are served with Grade A pure maple syrup at the Miss Portland Diner. (Jill Brady/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images)

Bad news for breakfast fans: Real maple syrup may soon be a product of the past.

Sugar maples, the northern-climate hardwood whose sap is concentrated to make the popular breakfast condiment, have been under threat from global warming for years. Scientists had initially hoped that increased nitrogen from pollution would mitigate the effects of increased temperatures and drought, as nitrogen is a natural fertilizer for plants, but new research shows otherwise.

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