Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Major conservation of B.C. forestry land totalling 45,000 hectares announced

Canadian Press in CBC News
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…The Nature Conservancy of Canada says it is among the country’s largest private land conservation projects to date, and it becomes part of a network of protected areas in the Rockies that stretches into Montana. The group says the land being conserved is known as the Kootenay Forest Lands located in southeastern B.C., within the homelands of the Ktunaxa Nation. The land involved is described as “high elevation grasslands” that provide a “rare ecosystem considered to be at risk,” with old-growth forests, 930 kilometres of streams and critical habitat for grizzly bears, whitebark pine, bull trout and bighorn sheep. It says among the private partners to the conservation agreement is Glencore-subsidiary Elk Valley Resources, which operates coal mines in the valley, and it is endorsed by the Ktunaxa Nation.

Read More

B.C. government eyes wildfire fighting drones, other tech to deal with emergencies

By Martin MacMahon
CTV News
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

…On Tuesday, the government detailed its approach, which will allow companies to apply for funding, reducing financial risk while developing technology in the areas of wildfire and flood prevention, mitigation and management, forestry management and emergency response. It calls this the “Forestry Innovation and Emergency Management Testbed,” having previously offered “testbeds” in the areas of airports, marine ports and health care to encourage innovation in those sectors. …Drones offer some potential advantages over helicopters. One operator can fly multiple drones at once, while delivering similar payloads of water or retardant. …The program is run as part of what the government calls its “Integrated Marketplace,” which receives up to $41.5 million from the Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth and $11.7 million from the federal government.

See Government Press Release, by Ministry of Jobs and Economic Growth: Strengthening government’s response to emergencies – Forestry Innovation and Emergency Management Testbed launched

Read More

Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Project Shows Early Success Near Palmer Lake

By Sabrina Spencer
CFNR Network
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. says it is making strong progress on its large-scale land rehabilitation project near Palmer Lake in the Cariboo Chilcotin, with early results showing positive outcomes for both the land and local communities. The project focuses on restoring forest areas heavily damaged by catastrophic wildfires, many of which have been considered difficult to rehabilitate and left untreated for years. ….According to CCR’s Forestry Superintendent, Registered Professional Forester Daniel Persson, the project has delivered significant economic benefits. He says every dollar invested in the Palmer Lake project is generating roughly four dollars in return, flowing directly back into Indigenous employment and local communities. …While burned, much of the wood fibre can still be used and is being shipped to pulp mills and bioenergy companies, supporting operations during a period of fibre scarcity.

Read More

Researchers receive funding from B.C. Knowledge Development Fund

By the Faculty of Forestry
University of British Columbia
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

On Dec 15, the Province of British Columbia announced new investments through the B.C. Knowledge Development Fund (BCKDF) to support research infrastructure and innovation across the province. Among the 71 UBC-led projects receiving funding are nine initiatives led by researchers from UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship, spanning forest and conservation sciences, wood science, and forest resources management. These projects address critical challenges such as Indigenous land relationships, ecosystem and climate resilience, wildfire science, sustainable building materials, and zero-carbon construction. The funding strengthens UBC Forestry & Environmental Stewardship’s research capacity and highlights the faculty’s leadership in advancing solutions for climate change, sustainable natural resource management, and resilient communities in British Columbia and beyond. Congratulations to our researchers on this significant achievement and recognition of their impactful work.

Read More

Old growth vital to Vancouver Island’s threatened screech-owls, says scientist

By Jessica Durling
Nanaimo News Bulletin
December 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Megan Buers

Coastal screech-owls once flourished over the east coast of Vancouver Island, but now the subspecies has become a rare sight for birders. …Both subspecies have been considered threatened for more than a decade, with the committee on the status of endangered wildlife in Canada noting that the coastal subspecies faces ongoing threats including predation from barred owls, as well as habitat loss where logging has altered the age structure of the forest. “They were ubiquitous, they were everywhere at very high densities and not that long ago,” ornithologist Megan Buers said. …The largest reason for the low number along the east coast, the scientist said, is land development. “Those Garry oak ecosystems are highly degraded,” she said. …Currently, Buers believes Vancouver Island should be able to support “three or four times” the population of coastal screech owls that it has now.

Read More

Conversations That Matter: Trees, genomics and climate

By Stuart McNish
The Vancouver Sun
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

“Trees are the lungs of the earth and home to millions of organisms, fungi and animals,” says Sally Aitken at the University of BC’s forestry department and lead of the AdapTree project. “Without a doubt one of the most successful species on earth.” Aitken also warns, “they are a species under threat due to rapid environmental changes.” The biggest challenge for trees is the rate of change. “For time immemorial, trees have adapted to a changing environment and they continue to do so,” says Aitken. The objective of the AdapTree project is to address that pace of change by identifying alleles in Douglas fir, spruce, western larch, jack pine and lodgepole pine trees that have adapted to a variety of environments. Using genetic tools, the team at AdapTree, works with a variety of stakeholders within forestry to identify strains of species that will survive in regions where environmental conditions are changing.

Read More

Amid mill closures and tariffs, comes a different kind of forestry

By Eric Plummer
Ha-Shilth-Sa | Canada’s Oldest First Nation’s Newspaper
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Gold River, BC — This has not been a good year for forestry as the industry continues to feel the pain from escalating tariffs, mill closures and job losses. But in Nootka Sound a First Nation is looking to a future where trees have a higher value staying in the ground. …the Mowachaht/Muchalaht First Nation is looking at an entirely different economic approach to managing its territorial forests and waters in Nootka Sound. The First Nation’s Salmon Parks project aims to have 66,595 hectares, comprising approximately 20 per cent of its land territory, under a protected designation by 2030. The initiative strictly limits industrial activity within the Salmon Parks – particularly old growth logging – with hopes of eventually allowing nature to heal itself to the point that salmon runs rebound from the headwaters to the ocean. …As the project seeks an economic future, the Salmon Parks initiative is looking at the economic value of keeping trees standing by selling carbon credits. 

Read More

Halalt chief says band-aid solutions won’t solve Chemainus River flooding

By Robert Barron
The Cowichan Valley Citizen
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Band-aid solutions are not going to fix the flooding problems in the Chemainus River watershed, Chief James Thomas from the Halalt First Nation told North Cowichan’s council on Nov. 19. He said the watershed and its salmon are in jeopardy mainly due to logging practices that were conducted upstream in the watershed over the past 50 years. Thomas said the Halalt and its partners, who are working on finding solutions to the watershed’s issues, didn’t create the problem, they inherited it. There is general community consensus that gravel and sediment accumulation, scoured banks, and increased debris, largely from logging operations upstream, have increased in recent years causing extreme flooding downstream, including on Halalt reserve lands. …Thomas and Cheri Ayers from Waters Edge Biological Consultants made a presentation to council on the Chemainus Watershed Initiative. The initiative began following two flooding events in 2020 and 2021.

Read More

2 more arrests at Vancouver Island forestry blockade, RCMP say

By Ian Holliday
CTV News
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mounties enforcing an injunction against anti-logging protesters on Vancouver Island say they made two more arrests Thursday. The latest arrests at the protesters’ Walbran Forest Service Road blockade bring the total to 13 since enforcement began on Nov. 25, police said in a news release. The arrests were made after officers patrolling the injunction area “located some individuals perched on top of tree structures that blocked the roadway.” Two people were arrested for breaching the injunction, Mounties said. One of them was released at the scene with conditions. The other was held in custody for breaching the conditions of their release after a previous arrest at the blockade last month. …Of the 13 arrests made since enforcement began, two have involved individuals who had already been arrested at the site previously.

Read More

B.C.’s forest industry needs massive overhaul

By Jim Pine, logger, highschool teacher, Elders for Ancient Forests
Victoria Times Colonist
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jim Pine

The closure of the Crofton pulp mill is the latest symptom of forest mismanagement. How did we get to this point? The Indigenous people were always here, but we Europeans started as a colony of Britain, hence the name British Columbia. …The purpose of a colony was to grab the land and to send wealth back to the colonizing country. Here, that meant forest products, fish and minerals. We still retain that colonial mentality. …Herein lies the great paradox. We have handed over our natural legacy to distant corporations with a fiduciary responsibility to maximize profits… Short-term thinking is incompatible with long-term life cycles. What’s to be done? Switch from corporate control tree farm licences to community forest licences; Implement an immediate moratorium on all old-growth logging; Ban raw log exports; Ban the export of cants; Appropriately tax “Managed Forest Land”; Pass the Species At Risk Act; and Support value-added manufacturing.

Read More

Professional Master’s Panel Discussion Info Session 2026 – UBC Forestry

UBC Faculty of Forestry
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

The University of British Columbia Faculty of Forestry & Environmental Stewardship will host an online Professional Master’s Panel Discussion and Information Session on January 15, 2026 (10:00–11:00 am PST) via Zoom. The session is designed for prospective graduate students and professionals seeking to deepen technical expertise, strengthen leadership capabilities, and expand industry networks within forestry and environmental management fields. Representatives from four accelerated professional master’s programs will present and answer questions: the Master of Geomatics for Environmental Management, emphasizing geospatial technologies for natural resource planning; the Master of International Forestry, combining experiential learning with applied coursework; the Master of Sustainable Forest Management, focusing on professional land management; and the Master of Urban Forestry Leadership, an interdisciplinary program targeting urban forestry strategy and climate adaptation. Participants will engage directly with program directors, coordinators, and advising staff to assess fit and clarify admissions, curriculum, and career outcomes.

Read More

Resilient Forest Management provides a roadmap for progressive forestry in uncertain times!

By Philip J. Burton
Oxford Academic
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

I am pleased to announce the release of my book, “Resilient Forest Management,” published by Oxford University Press. While sustainability remains aspirational, changing values, shifts in climate, accelerating natural disturbances, and trade barriers call for a new approach to forest stewardship. Building on the principles of complex adaptive systems, this book provides a roadmap for progressive forestry in uncertain times, supported by several examples and case studies. Attention is paid to the management of protected areas, agricultural woodlands, and the urban forest as well as to multi-purpose and industrial forestlands. See the Read More below for more details and a table of contents. Suitable as a textbook or as an armchair read, this book is available for purchase as a Google Play ebook, and in paperback and hardcover versions through on-line and local booksellers, or directly from the publisher.

Read More

7,600 voices help guide Mosaic as it revamps its Island backcountry access strategy

By Marc Kitteringham
Ladysmith Chemainus Chronicle
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Mosaic Forest Management is moving forward with plans to modernize its access program, following a survey earlier this year. In May, 7,600 respondents “clearly indicated Islanders want well-managed public recreation access,” Mosaic said. To that end, Mosaic hired RC Strategies and Legacy Tourism Group. The two firms will build a stronger system for managing recreation on Mosaic lands, balancing public access with environmental protection, safety, and operational needs. Pilot initiatives are expected to be implemented in 2026. …The upcoming engagement process will include First Nations, users, and community members, [as well as] local and provincial governments to address challenges that private forest landowners cannot resolve independently. …“Mosaic is taking a progressive step that very few private landowners have undertaken at this scale,” said Justin Ellis, Partner at RC Strategies. “We’re excited to help develop a recreation access program that balances great outdoor experiences with the operational and environmental realities of a privately owned working forest.”

Read More

No chronic wasting disease found in tested Okanagan deer

By Ministry of Water, Land and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
December 8, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Further testing has confirmed that a sample submitted from a male white-tailed deer harvested east of Enderby is negative for chronic wasting disease (CWD). CWD is an infectious and fatal disease affecting cervids, including deer, elk, moose and caribou. The initial screening test by the B.C. Animal Health Centre showed a “non-negative” finding for the sample, meaning the disease could not be definitively ruled out and required more testing. Following standard protocol, the sample was sent to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency reference laboratory for confirmatory testing. The laboratory conducted confirmatory testing using three different methods. All results were negative for CWD.

Read More

Province, feds funding wildfire planning for 50 New Brunswick communities

By Ian Curran
CBC News
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

Michael Boyle

The federal and provincial governments are providing 50 New Brunswick communities with a combined $2.6 million for wildfire planning. According to the Department of Natural Resources, there have been 448 wildfires in 2025, burning over 3,412 hectares of New Brunswick’s forests. This is almost double the 281 wildfires that were recorded in 2024. “I think in New Brunswick and the Maritimes, we’ve sometimes not thought that wildfires were much of an issue,” said Kennebecasis Valley Fire Chief Mike Boyle. “It’s obvious that it’s something that we need to be aware of and a concern for us.” Boyle said his community is one of the 50 that have been selected to receive some of the funding. It will go towards allowing fire departments to hire consultants who will help create or update wildfire preparedness plans.

Read More

Standing dead … the hidden risk of ash trees across region

By Monika Rekola
Orillia Matters
December 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada East

©NRCan

What used to be a healthy ash forest now stands as a thin, brittle skeleton along Tay Shore Trail. Last winter’s ice storm didn’t just knock out power across southern Ontario, it uncovered a serious hazard: thousands of tall, brittle, and bone-dead ash trees, silent casualties of the emerald ash borer (EAB). Ash forests once stretched across Ontario floodplains, including pockets of Simcoe County. They filtered groundwater, stabilized riverbanks, and sheltered entire ecological communities. Indigenous peoples relied on ash for basket-making; farmers used it for tool handles; athletes swung ash baseball bats. To lose them so fast — in a single generation — is heartbreaking. Simcoe County is now fully infested. And we are entering the phase where the last remaining dead trunks are collapsing.

Read More

Over 200 Natural Resources Canada employees face job loss amid lack of transparent communication from Ottawa

By Keira Miller
98 Cool FM
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Over 200 employees at Natural Resources Canada have been informed that their positions either have been, or will be, cut in the near future. Mark Grimson is Union of Canadian Transportation Employees’ Regional Vice President for the Prairies & the North. He says last week, about 100 employees at Natural Resources Canada were told that their positions had been cut, and notices were sent out to over 100 more, warning that they could face the same fate. He says the cut workers were responsible for tasks such as forest fire tracking, flood tracking, and identification of other environmental risks. Although these are important jobs in an everchanging climate, Grimson says what’s more disturbing is the human impact these job cuts have had. …Most of the information being received comes in the form of public news releases, not personal addresses. Grimson says it would be nice to hear directly from the federal government.  

Read More

EU Deforestation Rule: Creating Administrative Hurdles and Market Barriers Rather than Saving Forests

By Samantha Ayoub, Economist
The American Farm Bureau Federation
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

The EU Deforestation Rule has already caused supply chain hurdles for American farmers, ranchers and foresters, and the rule has not even begun being enforced. EU farmers themselves have raised concerns over their compliance requirements and received additional flexibilities, and member governments are still navigating how to implement the complex auditing system. With these logistical challenges clear even to EU officials, the European Commission has voted to once again delay the rule’s implementation until 2026 and 2027 for large and small businesses, respectively. However, as long as the rule stands as currently drafted, agricultural supply chains will be strained from the looming enforcement deadline. Overall, the EU fails to recognize the long-standing position of American farmers and ranchers as global leaders in agricultural production with environmental stewardship. A rule that was originally targeted to penalize bad actors in the global marketplace has now hindered some of the most productive producers in the world.

Read More

Hope—and Many Fears—Follow in the Wake of Trump’s Plan to Transform Wildland Firefighting

By Kiley Price
Inside Climate News
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

One of the most profound shifts in how the United States manages wildland fire is underway. Federal wildland fire forces are spread across several agencies, closely collaborating but each tackling prevention and protection somewhat differently. Now, the Trump administration is creating an entirely new “U.S. Wildland Fire Service” to combine as much of that under one headquarters roof as it can. A firefighter with decades of federal and local experience says he has been tapped to head that agency, news that heartened much of the wildfire community when it broke just over a week ago. …But the muddled rollout of these plans—along with widespread layoffs at agencies that fight wildfires and a crackdown on efforts to combat the climate change that’s fueling the flames—have sowed concerns that this is not the right administration to carry out such a significant transformation.

Read More

‘Do I trust the administration?’ Western Democrats split on backing forest clearing bill

By Helen Huiskes
The Salt Lake Tribune
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

©National Interagency Fire Center

Some in Congress worry the Fix Our Forest Act ignores community input and would result in new timber cutting. Democrats are split over whether to support a bill that would allow the U.S. Forest Service to clear more land, faster, in an effort to prevent wildfires. The legislation, which has bipartisan support and is headed for a full Senate vote after passing out of committee, has already run up against concerns from environmental groups and some Democrats who don’t want to open the door for President Donald Trump’s administration to amp up logging. For some Western Democrats, the urgency is worth the risk. “[Firefighters are] handcuffed in terms of the vegetation management that they can do, which doesn’t make a lot of sense,” said Josh Harder, one of the Democratic cosponsors of the original House version, who represents a northern California district.

Read More

Trump’s timber production goals fall short

By Marc Heller
E&E News by Politico
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

President Trump swept into office with a promise to ramp up the timber business on national forests. So far, they’re just treading water. The Forest Service reported relatively flat timber harvests and sales for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. …According to the agency’s cut-and-sold reports, national forests cut 2.52 billion board feet of timber for the fiscal year, down slightly from the 2.66 billion board feet cut during the last full fiscal year of the Biden administration. Sales volume totalled 2.95 billion board feet, a slight increase from the prior year but a drop from 3.08 billion board feet the year before that. The suppressed returns reflect some of the challenges in meeting Trumps’s directive to use national forests to reduce the nation’s reliance on wood imports. Those include wildfires, market conditions… and the Forest Service’s ability to set up and run timber sales after the administration whittled the workforce. [to access the full story, an E&E News subscription is required]

Read More

The Death of the US Forest Service Is Overdue

By Andy Kerr
The Wildlife News
December 14, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

In the face of the Trump 2.0 onslaught against the nation’s public lands, most of the public lands conservation community has instinctively defended the landscape. As we should. However, we have also reflexively defended the federal bureaucracies charged with administering the nation’s public lands and waters that are under Trumpian assault. But we should not. The public lands conservation community needs to be visionary, not reactionary. The nation’s federal public lands are worth defending, but not so the nation’s public land agencies. In the case of the Forest Service, the agency has behaved indefensibly and irredeemably and should be scrapped for parts. …Though the agency touts itself as a multiple-use agency… in the end timber production trumps protection of wildlife and water quality, preservation of beauty, provision of recreation. …The rationale of timber supply to the nation no longer resonates. In fact, only about 4% of the nation’s wood supply.

Read More

House passes LaMalfa’s bill to safeguard aerial fire retardant amid wildfire responses

By Adam Robinson
KRCR TV
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A bill by Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale) to keep aerial fire retardant available during wildfire response passed the House on Thursday as part of the PERMIT Act. LaMalfa introduced the Forest Protection and Wildland Firefighter Safety Act after a 2023 court ruling concluded the U.S. Forest Service needed Clean Water Act permits for retardant drops. The decision raised the possibility of delays and conflicting requirements for federal, state, local and tribal firefighting agencies. The bill would shield retardant use from years-long permitting processes and remove uncertainty created by litigation. The Forest Service has described retardant as a key tool for slowing fast-moving fires and supporting ground operations. The measure now heads to the Senate. …“Aerially delivered long-term fire retardant is an essential tool the Forest Service and the interagency wildfire response community use in support of ground-based firefighting resources,” said Tom Schultz, U.S. Forest Service Chief. 

Read More

Trump’s Changes to What Harms Species Adds Risk in Logging Areas

By Bobby Magill
Bloomberg Law
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The Trump administration’s pending deletion of the Endangered Species Act’s definition of “harm” will have an outsize impact on imperiled species in Northwest forests targeted for logging, especially the northern spotted owl, environmental attorneys say. Habitat for several species, including the threatened owl and the endangered marbled murrelet seabird, overlap with federally-managed forests in Oregon, Washington, and California, where logging is expected to increase under White House emergency orders and a new law that requires a roughly 75% increase in timber harvesting in national forests by 2034. “Without adequate, suitable places to live and reproduce, species go extinct,” said Melinda Taylor, senior lecturer at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law. “Repealing the definition of harm would undermine almost all of the regulatory framework in place to protect endangered species.” 

Read More

Failure to harvest Alaska timber degrades both forest and economy

By Rep. Kevin McCabe
Alaska Watchman
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Kevin McCabe

There’s a narrative floating about that Alaska lacks merchantable timber, or that permits exist without wood to harvest. That claim is convenient for those who oppose active forest management, but it doesn’t hold up when examined against hard data or realities on the ground. …The path forward is not complicated, but it does require political will. Recent federal directives create opportunities to increase responsible timber production if agencies choose to act. That means active young-growth management in the Tongass, improved access and infrastructure in the Interior and regulatory reforms, including updates to plans such as the Chugach’s to incorporate sustainable timber objectives. It means addressing Roadless Rule barriers where appropriate, offering predictable and appropriately scaled timber sales, updating lumber grading standards for young-growth products, certifying small mills and building local processing capacity. …Alaska’s forestry challenge is not a shortage of trees. It is a shortage of policies that work.

Read More

First lodgepoles, now ponderosas, Colorado is fighting beetles on multiple fronts

By Bente Birkeland
Colorado Public Radio News
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Gov. Jared Polis signed an executive order aimed at curbing a mountain pine beetle outbreak in ponderosa forests along the front range. Polis attributes the outbreak to drought, and a warming climate. He said he recently received a briefing and was shocked by the projections of how much the infestation is expected to spread. “This means that most or nearly all mature Ponderosa pines will be killed by pine beetles in the western front range over the next several years,” Polis said. …His executive order creates a task force to try to use the best science to coordinate a response with landowners, from counties and private individuals, to the state and federal government. …“It’s absolutely critical that we have mitigation to take down affected trees quickly,” Polis said. “Especially near residential areas, creating defensive barriers.” Polis said he is also concerned about the risk for wildfires, water quality, recreation, and the economy.

Read More

150-year-old seed company in Washington helps reforest in the face of climate change

By Bellamy Pailthorp
Oregon Public Broadcasting
December 13, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Climate change is contributing to drier conditions in the Pacific Northwest, causing wildfires to become more intense and destructive. A growing reforestation industry has emerged in their wake. The company Silvaseed is a key player in the region. Based southeast of Olympia in Roy, Washington, Silvaseed collects, cleans, catalogues and preserves seeds. It also raises millions of seedlings every year in its greenhouses and fields. Customers include private timber companies, public land managers and tribal nations. …Inside a warehouse built in the 1940s, Silvaseed general manager Kea Woodruff starts a tour of the facilities by flipping a switch to fire up a huge, old kiln. …Woodruff said most species’ cones need the kiln to reach about 100 degrees Fahrenheit. …At every step of the way, as the seed gets refined and purified, the bags are meticulously labeled and tracked.

Read More

In Oregon, America’s Top Christmas Tree Producer, She’s the Christmas Tree Grower’s Doctor

The Corvallis Advocate
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Priya Rajarapu

Priya Rajarapu works as a Christmas tree expert for Oregon State University’s Extension Service, helping Oregon’s 300-plus Christmas tree growers produce a healthy crop each holiday season so that the state can export millions of perfect trees across the world. An assistant professor in the College of Forestry, Rajarapu earned her doctorate in entomology, and is studying how to keep Oregon’s holiday industry thriving as the climate changes. …Oregon sold 3.17 million trees in 2023 – making it the top Christmas tree grower in the United States and contributing $118 million to Oregon’s economy. …Before his retirement, Rajarapu’s predecessor Chal Landgren established new species at the three-acre field site that she now oversees. For example, Nordmann and Turkish fir, both native to Georgia, now make up a small but growing percentage of Oregon’s crop. These species hold their needles longer after they’re cut. “They’re drought-and pest-tolerant,” Rajarapu said. “That reduces inputs such as chemical insecticides.”

Related content in Philomath News, by Mia Maldonado: Oregon researchers seek climate-resilient Christmas trees to protect state’s leading industry

Read More

Abandon new Tongass management plan? Timber says yes, tribes say no ahead of meetings next week

By Mark Sabbatini
Juneau Independent
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

Two meetings next week between U.S. Forest Service leadership and timber industry representatives in Southeast Alaska are raising concerns among tribal and other officials about the possibility a years-long revision of the management plan for the Tongass National Forest will be halted by the Trump administration. At least one additional meeting is now planned next week because of those concerns, scheduled next Friday in Juneau between Forest Service leaders and members of the Central Council of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska, according to officials. A request to halt work on the revised plan is being made by the Alaska Forest Association, which states less than 10% of old-growth trees allotted to the timber industry in a 2016 revision of the plan have actually been authorized for harvest. The allocation of 430 million board feet (mmbf) was intended to support a 15-year industry transition to harvesting new-growth trees, according to AFA.

Read More

The argument for letting Idaho manage federal lands in Idaho

By Russ Fulcher, R-Idaho
The Idaho Statesman
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Russ Fulcher

In Idaho, our public lands are a treasured part of our way of life, offering recreational opportunities, abundant resources, and natural beauty. Over 62% of the land within Idaho’s borders is controlled by the federal government. …This extensive federal government footprint poses significant challenges to our autonomy in issuing leases for timber, grazing, and mining. …After seven years in Congress, it is clear to me that the federal government — who is effectively our landlord — has failed to manage the lands wisely and has been derelict in working with state and local entities to reduce the risk of wildfires, provide the public with better access to natural resources, and address the overall health of our lands. …Last year, federal land mismanagement was a major factor in nearly one million acres of our beautiful Idaho going up in flames, a level of devastation that puts significant financial strain on our local economies. 

Read More

It’s Time To Fix Wyoming’s Forests

By Jim Magagna and Travis Brammer
Cowboy State Daily
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Jim Magagna

Travis Brammer

America’s national forests were birthed in Wyoming in 1891, with the establishment of the Shoshone National Forest. At the 21st century’s quarter mark, however, our nation’s cherished forests are struggling. In 2024, Wyoming experienced its second-worst wildfire season on record, as more than 800,000 acres of forests burned. Nearly 20 percent of Wyoming’s public forests are at high or very high risk of a catastrophic wildfire, according to the Forest Service. Unless we do something, we can expect more years like 2024. We know how to fix this problem: mechanical thinning to remove excess fuels followed by regular use of prescribed fire and grazing to keep fuels in check. Yet it doesn’t happen. A study by the University of California-Davis and the Property and Environment Research Center found that the Forest Service treats only one percent of its land in Wyoming each year. Fortunately, Congress is on the cusp of passing bipartisan legislation to change that.

Read More

Judge blocks massive logging project in southern Montana

By Edvard Pettersson
The Courthouse News
December 11, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A federal judge on Thursday vacated the U.S. Forest Service’s approval of a massive logging project [to harvest] about 16,500 acres of pine trees in the Custer Gallatin National Forest in southern Montana, just north of Yellowstone National Park. Senior U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula, Montana, agreed with a collective of environmental advocates that the U.S. Forest Service failed to meet the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act by relying on a condition-based management approach, which doesn’t identify the location of the 56.8 miles of temporary roads for the project and, as such, doesn’t adequately consider their impact on “secure habitat” for grizzly bears. Condition-based management defers specific decisions on how to proceed until the Forest Service has conducted field reviews. Here, it means the Forest Service has preliminarily identified areas as suitable for logging without identifying the precise location and size of the area to be cleared…

Read More

Bill to place Quinault Indian Nation lands into trust passes house

The Daily World
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

WASHINGTON — On Tuesday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed two major bills for Washington state Tribes, the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe Project Lands Restoration Act, and the Quinault Indian Nation Land Transfer Act. Both bills initiate the first step to return land back to the Tribes by transferring ownership from the federal government to the Bureau of Indian Affairs to be held in trust for the benefit of the Tribes. [The bills were introduced into] legislation in April 2025. The bills now go to the Senate for consideration. “Today, we took an important step in upholding our treaty obligations by passing legislation to transfer land into trust for the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe and the Quinault Indian Nation,” said Rep. Randall. “I urge my colleagues in the Senate to quickly pass these two bills to ensure we meet our trust responsibilities to restore Tribal lands.”

Read More

After nearly two-year lapse, Congress renews Secure Rural Schools funding

By Alex Baumhardt
The Alaska Beacon
December 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

After letting funding lapse for nearly two years, Congress voted to renew crucial federal funding that rural counties and schools have counted on for a quarter century. The U.S. House of Representatives on Tuesday evening voted 399-5 to reauthorize the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act through September 2026, and to provide lapsed payments for the 2024 and 2025 fiscal years. The vote came after a year-long campaign led by bipartisan federal lawmakers from the West. The U.S. Senate in June unanimously voted to reauthorize the act. It now goes to the president to be signed into law. …Wyden co-authored the original law that provided tens of millions each year for rural schools and communities that previously benefited from revenue generated by natural resource industries on public lands. 

Read More

Forest Service taps the brakes on wildfire defense across the west

By Jacob Smith
Hoodline San Jose
December 10, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: US West

A new analysis making the rounds on Capitol Hill says the U.S. Forest Service sharply scaled back prescribed burns, thinning and other fuel-reduction work this year, leaving far fewer acres treated than in recent years. Through the first nine months of 2025, the agency logged under 1.7 million acres of treatments, well below the roughly four-year average that wildfire experts say is needed to protect communities and watersheds. The drop-off has Democratic senators and veteran firefighters pressing the agency for staffing numbers and a concrete plan to catch up before next fire season. As reported by Times of San Diego, the data cited by lawmakers comes from an analysis compiled by Grassroots Wildland Firefighters that compares the January-September 2025 total to a roughly 3.6 million-acre annual average from 2021-2024. Senators circulated that tally in a letter demanding detailed staffing and mitigation plans from the Forest Service.

Read More

The American West’s most iconic tree is disappearing

By Gary Ferguson
Phys.Org
December 9, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A profound unraveling is underway in the American Southwest, happening across a thousand-mile arc from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the central Sierra. In an unprecedented calamity, the most widely distributed, most iconic tree of the region—the beautiful ponderosa pine—is disappearing. …It was the ponderosa pine that more than 1,100 years ago allowed the rise of the first cities in what would later become the United States, providing structural beams for the multi-storied dwellings of the Ancestral Pueblo. …Since 2000, more than 200 million ponderosa have died. More alarming still is that many of those forests won’t be coming back, likely yielding the ground to what will be grass and shrublands for centuries to come. …The loss of forest will also mean much faster melting of the spring snowpacks, since the snow will no longer be shaded by trees.

Read More

How the Trump administration is fast-tracking logging in Illinois’ only national forest

By Juanpablo Ramirez-Franco
WBEZ Chicago
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

…Shawnee is the only national forest in the state and one of the smallest in the nation. The agency initially billed the timber sale, called the McCormick Oak-Hickory Restoration Project, as a “thinning” operation to remove older trees and make room for younger saplings. But logging operations contribute to habitat loss, and Stearns found the Forest Service’s justification lacking. … For months, he and other local environmentalists scoured the web and newspapers for mentions of the sale to prepare for the comment period, but the McCormick Project never turned up. …It turned out that the Forest Service advertised the project under a different name — “V-Plow” — and by the time advocates realized it, they were a week into the project’s three-week comment period. …The following month, Stearns and other environmentalists sued the agency, trying to block the plan.

Read More

Douglas-fir shows early promise as Sitka spruce replacement

By Jack Haugh
UK Forestry Journal
December 16, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Douglas-fir may prove to be a productive alternative to Sitka spruce for the UK’s commercial forestry sector. That is one of the early conclusions from ongoing research to test the suitability of 17 tree species as potential options for future timber production. Taking place across a network of nine large-scale experiments (in locations such as the Newcastleton, Cowal, and the Black Isle), the Forest Research-led investigation also found Douglas fir had the promise for further use in the south and east of the country, where the climate is forecast to become significantly hotter and drier than today. While already considered by many as a serious option, the species only makes up around 4 per cent of the UK’s total commercial forest.

Read More

Six researchers receive Wallenberg grants for forestry-related social research

Umeå University
December 15, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Six researchers at Umeå University will receive SEK 38 million in grants from the Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation and the Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Memorial Fund for humanities and social science research with forestry relevance. Almost half of the thirteen projects approved are going to Umeå University, which demonstrates the university’s strength and breadth in this field. “The Swedish forestry issue has largely relied on research in natural sciences and technology, but forestry is really a social and humanistic issue, which is why this call for proposals is both relevant and innovative. And the fact that we have six projects … is a good indication of the breadth of our research in this area,” says Thomas Olofsson, Deputy Vice-Chancellor for research. Louise Eriksson, docent in psychology and researcher in environmental psychology, will receive a grant of six million Swedish kronor to investigate acceptance of climate-adapted forest management.

Read More

Merger to create New Zealand’s Leading Independent Forestry Manager

By Forests360
Scoop Independent News
December 12, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Two of New Zealand’s leading forestry businesses – PF Olsen and Forest360 – announced their merger to create the largest independent forest management company in Australasia. As part of the transaction, PF Olsen and Forest360 will bring on private investor Adamantem Capital as an investment partner, alongside existing PF Olsen cornerstone shareholder Quayside Holdings to support the group’s next stage of growth. Combining decades of experience, complementary services and deep regional roots, the merger will make for a stronger, more resilient business for forestry clients across New Zealand and Australia. Together, the group will manage approximately 480,000 hectares of forest and support more than 1000 clients, from major institutional investors to family-run businesses and private landowners. …Existing executives will lead the merged entity, with Forest360’s Dan Gaddum being appointed Group CEO, PF Olsen’s Ross Larcombe appointed Group Chief Commercial Officer and Forest360’s Marcus Musson appointed Group Chief Operating Officer.

Read More