It's pretty general, but this info may help. From page 137: "Insect outbreaks, windstorms, and fires are increasing in frequency and severity; while many forests specialize in fires and fire recovery, no forest can persist with severe fires every decade. Estimates are a 40 percent reduction, or at least simplification, of forests, with a rise in global temperatures of 5.4°F (3°C), which is highly likely in the coming decades. The actual change may lag temperatures a bit—trees are tough creatures—but they are not invincible. And when change happens, it can happen fast." There are a few pages with visuals, including "Death by a Thousand Bites" which shows that a pine tree remains green for several months while pine beetles are first feeding on it, and then the needles may turn yellow for a few months during summer drought, and only during the second year of the infestation does it turn red (i.e. it is dying). A couple pages later, there's a paragraph labeled "Domino Effect," which gives this example: "cheatgrass thrives when temperatures rise, adding kindling to wildfires that are already more intense due to drier conditions, and fires can spread faster where bark beetles have killed trees."
Also, in the section about changes in groundwater, there may have been mention of some tree species wanting a specific amount of water and not tolerating the soil becoming drier/wetter.
In another book I read recently, there was a brief mention of trees that grow on the coastline suffering from rising sea levels because their marsh or groundwater gets saltier. This affects red cedars on Cape Cod.