Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Forest Stewardship Council News & Views

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
April 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Headlines this month include: 

  • How forestry is supporting biodiversity in Northumberland County
  • Forest Stewardship Council launches the FSC Brand Hub – a new platform for FSC trademarks and marketing
  • FSC is hiring a Director of Marketing
  • Advancing EUDR: A time to act and make it a reality
  • FSC is hiring an Operations Manager
  • The outcomes of COP 16.2 create momentum for the forest sector to strengthen its commitment to biodiversity
  • FSC Forest Week 2025 – September 20 – 26 – Registration Open

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New Report shows repeat spraying of BC and New Brunswick forests, contrary to federal approval

By Safe Food Matters Inc.
Cision Newswire
March 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

TORONTO – A new report shows pesticides are sprayed on Canadian forests up to 7 times in the forestry cycle, not just once – as assumed in Health Canada’s approval for spraying. It also shows the risks to people eating forest foods, including Indigenous people and foragers, have not been assessed. The report, written by Safe Food Matters, presents data compiled by the Wilderness Committee and Stop Spraying New Brunswick showing cutblocks in New Brunswick and British Columbia have been sprayed 2, 3 or more times with glyphosate, the main pesticide used in forestry. It presents evidence that many Indigenous people eat forest foods, putting them at risk. Recent science from the University of Northern BC shows glyphosate accumulates and persists for years in forest plants like berries and roots. Based on the report, groups are signing an Open Letter to the Health Minister to cancel the approval.

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Industrial update: Helping Cariboo forests regrow

By Andie Mollins
The Williams Lake Tribune
March 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

When it comes to reforesting areas made bare by natural causes, it’s the Ministry of Forests’ job to oversee the progress. “Wildfire…really is the biggest thing we’re focusing on,” said Shelley Barlow, the ministry’s regional silviculture specialist for the Cariboo. According to a February 2018 report by the Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development, 80 per cent of the area affected by the 2017 wildfires in B.C. was in the Cariboo. About one million hectares of forests were burnt in the region, and 609,000 of those hectares were part of the Cariboo’s timber harvesting land base. Prior to 2017, the ministry was planting up to two million trees per year in the Williams Lake forestry district. Since then, Barlow said this number has at least tripled.

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Island Forests clearcut protestors request three-year moratorium extension

News Talk 650 CKOM
March 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE ALBERT, SASK — As an important deadline approaches, concerned members of a forest protection group in the Prince Albert area are calling on the provincial government to extend a moratorium for clear-cutting in the Island Forests. According to the Government of Saskatchewan, the Island Forests comprise the Canwood, Nisbet, Fort-a-la-Corne and Torch River provincial forests in north central Saskatchewan, with a total area of approximately 227,000 hectares. Over 60 people showed up at meeting last week at Crutwell Community Hall, representing Sturgeon Lake First Nation and Wahpeton Dakota Nation, as well as non-indigenous people who live and farm in the area. …Concerns with the government’s Island Forest Timber Harvest Operating Plan first came to light in January 2024 when over half a dozen people showed up at the forestry centre in downtown Prince Albert. …Roughly three months later, the provincial government announced a one-year moratorium.

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Banff mayor says Alberta premier’s claims federal mismanagement putting Banff in danger of wildfire ‘unsubstantiated’

By Cathy Ellis
Rocky Mountain Outlook
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BANFF – Alberta Premier Danielle Smith’s statements that it is federal mismanagement that is putting Banff under threat of wildlife were quickly disputed by Banff Mayor Corrie DiManno as “completely unsubstantiated.” Smith had a face-to-face meeting with Prime Minister Mark Carney in Edmonton Thursday morning (March 20) and came out of the meeting with several demands, including energy demands, but also took a swipe at Parks Canada’s management of fires. “I made it clear that federal mismanagement of Jasper and Banff national parks resulted in last year’s tragic wildfire in Jasper and is endangering Banff, and the situation must be rectified immediately,” she said in a press release. DiManno said Smith’s characterization of federal forest and land management in Banff National Park is “completely unsubstantiated.”

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B.C. community releases wildfire dashboard

By Abigail Popple
The Rocky Mountain Goat in Canadian Under
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Dunster Community Forest Society, which also manages the Dunster Wildfire Brigade, has released a new wildfire dashboard for Dunster and the surrounding area, spanning through McBride and Cedarside. The dashboard will update alongside the BC Wildfire Service dashboard, but also includes links to the Regional District’s emergency alerts and a colour-coded legend showing thermal hotspots, volunteer firefighting boundaries, and local government properties, among other features. Dunster Community Forest Society administrator Marie Hyde said she made the dashboard to give residents an interactive database with more information than what the BC Wildfire Service dashboard offers on its own. She has previously made similar maps for the Dunster Community Forest using her experience as a geographic information systems analyst, which she says was useful for building the wildfire dashboard. “BC Wildfire Service, they usually just have a static map… And I thought, why not create an interactive one?” Hyde said.

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Forest Enhancement Society of BC project updates from around the province

By Jason Fisher, Executive Director
The Forest Enhancement Society of B.C.
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In this newsletter, we are pleased to share great stories of the impactful work happening in communities throughout our province. As the world continues to navigate the challenges affiliated with climate change, British Columbia’s forestry sector is playing a key role to mitigate its impacts and contribute to a more sustainable future. We take pride in investing in projects that provide enduring economic and social benefits for our local communities and are helping take action on this global issue. Last month, in collaboration with the Provincial Government, we shared more specifics about 70 recently funded projects moving forward to help local communities, community forests, First Nations, and other project partners enhance their wildfire prevention efforts and/or expand fibre-recovery initiatives. …In years past, much wood waste from harvesting operations was piled and burned in slash piles. Today, we invest in projects that recover this waste and use it to make forest products and generate green energy. 

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BC Community Forest Association Newsletter

The BC Community Forest Association
March 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West
See what’s happening in BC’s Community Forests, these stories and more in the newsletter:
  • BCCFA 2025 Conference & AGM in Nanaimo May 26th-28th: We are excited to announce that our sessions are coming together. Go to the conference website for more details. Watch for session announcements as details are confirmed.
  • Women Leading the Way in Forestry: Step into the Silvicon Services office in the northwestern town of Smithers, BC, and you’ll find a skilled and dynamic team managing the Wetzin’kwa Community Forest—most of whom are women.
  • We Work Together with the Land Video: Lil’wat Forestry Ventures (LFV), owned by the Lil’wat Nation, plays a vital role in managing over 75% of their territory while providing meaningful employment for more than 50 people.
  • NEW Thinning Guidance for British Columbia: Effective April 1, 2025, and applicable to all of BC, this new guidance is part of an adaptive management framework that leads to increased opportunities and benefits in our forests.

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Conservationists say land-use plan will decimate at-risk caribou herds in northwestern Alberta

By Brittany Ekelund
CTV News
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

ALBERTA — Conservationists say a new land-use plan from the province stands to “wipe out” two vulnerable caribou populations in northwestern Alberta. The Alberta Wilderness Association and the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society released a statement on Wednesday decrying the proposed Upper Smoky Sub-regional Plan. The plan will cover an area north of Jasper National Park. …“The timber harvest proposed in the draft Upper Smoky Sub-regional Plan would allow Weyerhaeuser to clearcut the remaining critical winter habitat and eliminate the ability of these caribou to annually migrate to the foothill’s forests,” the statement read. …To help halt caribou declines, the province has increased wolf reduction programs.  …Minister of Environment and Protected Areas Rebecca Schultz’s press secretary said the plan is not final and the draft materials are designed to generate input and feedback from those most impacted. …An online public survey on the new plan will be open until June 25.

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Portage College partners with town of Fox Creek on project to explore using fungi to fight wildfires

By Chris McGarry
Lakeland Today
March 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Michael Schulz

Portage College is partnering with the community of Fox Creek for an applied research project designed to highlight the role fungi could potentially play in reducing the hazards of wildfires. The principal investigator for the project is Michael Schulz, who also serves as the Research Chair in Environment and Sustainability in the Boreal Forest at Portage College. …the objective of the project is to collect species of fungi from a research area within a district of forested lands near the Town of Fox Creek. …they will be catalogued and studied for their individual wood-composting capabilities in ideal laboratory conditions.  …As to how fungi can work to reduce the risk of forest fires, the project team lead explained that fungi create moisture in wood as the decomposition process is taking place, and this lessens the burnability of the wood.  

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Stakeholders meet with government about clearcutting in Crutwell

By Michael Oleksyn
Prince Albert Daily Herald
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Members of the Protect our Forest group met with representatives from the province at Crutwell Community Hall on Wednesday, March 19. The group has been protesting clearcutting of forest around Cruttwell and Holbein, including two protests this summer in Prince Albert. The Forest Protection Network group includes members from the Wahpeton, Sturgeon Lake, and Holbein areas, who say forests in that part of the province have important cultural value and house heritage sites along the North Saskatchewan River. Carol Friedhoff-Nelson, a member of Metis Local 66 and a member of the Forest Protection Network in Crutwell, attended the meeting on March 19 in Crutwell Community Hall. “We had as many members of Local 66 as we could,” Friedhoff-Nelson said. “We had a lot of our neighbours from around the area and interested people who use the forest that is up to be cut.”

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Acadia to lead groundbreaking research to save Nova Scotia’s hemlocks, mitigate impacts of climate change

Education News Canada
March 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Dr. Kirk Hillier

At first glance, the Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (HWA) – a tiny, aphid-like insect barely bigger than a millimetre – hardly seems threatening. Beaded among leaves like garland, the insect’s fluffy white bodies could be mistaken for the world’s smallest cotton balls. You might even say they look cute. But those who understand the invasive critter and the devastation it can cause know better than to coo over evidence of HWA among nearby trees. Nova Scotia’s old-growth hemlock forests, the meal of choice for this insect, are now under significant threat if nothing is done – and the effects of these forests being wiped out would be catastrophic… “It’s not just a change in the landscape that’s at risk – but cascading ecological and economic destruction when entire tree species are lost,” said Dr. Hillier.

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New forestry investment reaches Pontiac

By Tashi Farmilo
Quebec Community Newspapers Association
March 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Pontiac, Quebec — The federal government is investing over $250,000 in five forestry-related projects across western Quebec, including initiatives in the Outaouais region, as part of a larger $13.3 million funding package aimed at strengthening the competitiveness and sustainability of Quebec’s forest sector. Announced on March 20 by Minister of Natural Resources Jonathan Wilkinson, the funding includes support from the Indigenous Forestry Initiative, which focuses on fostering Indigenous leadership in forest management and encouraging economic opportunities rooted in environmental stewardship. In the Outaouais, the Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg community in Maniwaki will receive $50,000 to enhance its ability to participate in forestry consultations. The project aims to equip the community with the tools and expertise needed to conduct in-depth analyses of proposed forest plans, ensuring that responses reflect community values and long-term impacts. Further north in Kebaowek, two projects are receiving federal support.

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Province of Ontario bolsters staff in preparation for 2025 wildland fire season

By Kris Ketonen
CBC News
March 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Province of Ontario says it’s prepared for the fast-approaching 2025 wildland fire season. The new season starts on April 1, and preparations have included filling more than 100 new, permanent positions to help support forest fire fighting operations, said Chris Marchand, fire information officer with Aviation, Forest Fire and Emergency Services (AFFES). …Exactly how busy this season will be remains unknown, Marchand said, as it’s very difficult to predict how intense a fire season will be. …Marchand said the previous winter saw “somewhat normal” snowfall patterns across Ontario. …Marchand noted, however, that the 2024 fire season was slower than usual — 480 fires were reported, down from the 10-year, seasonal average of 700 fires. The Province of Ontario said it partnered with the federal government last year to invest $64 million in the provincial wil

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Devastating ice storms drop trees and power lines across central Ontario

By Cheryl Browne
CTV News
March 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Dark streetlights, four-way stop rules in effect, trees lying across well-travelled roads, cold inside the homes and trees pop and crack signalling more destruction above. An ice storm the likes of which this area hasn’t seen in a decade has decimated the power grids, retail and business industries and yes, social media and the internet. Seemingly closed off to the rest of Ontario, areas from Newmarket and farther north to Huntsville and beyond can only watch as more trees fall, more power lines pop off from their tethers and relatives, too, remain in the dark without our social media lifelines. …In Muskoka, a State of Emergency has been called. Residents are urged to staff home and off the roads. …As of Monday morning, at 7:15 a.m., there are still almost 400,000 Hydro One customers affected by the power outages.

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See the Ice Damage That Prompted States of Emergency in Ontario

By the Weather Network
YouTube
March 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

A weekend ice storm hit hard in regions of southern Ontario with hundreds of thousands left in the dark, and significant damage across several communities. 

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Province of Ontario preparing for wildfire season

By Michael Stamou
Brant Beacon
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ontario is ready to respond to this year’s wildland fire season, which lasts from April 1 until October 31. This year, the government has filled nearly 100 additional permanent positions to support the 2025 fire season and help ensure people and resources are in place to protect communities. “We are ready to protect people, communities and properties across Ontario from wildland fires,” said Mike Harris, Minister of Natural Resources. “When wildland fires hit, our brave and dedicated FireRangers, pilots and support staff are prepared to battle these fires and protect Ontarians.” Last year, the province partnered with the federal government to invest a total of $64 million in the wildland fire program. This investment has allowed Ontario to enhance its firefighting capacity for the 2025 fire season and includes funding for forest fire suppression equipment and technology, such as fuel systems, trucks and emergency management software.

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Logging is quietly ravaging US forests. Trump is taking an axe to protections

By Jennifer Skene, NRDC
The Guardian
March 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, International

The world is running out of time to halt deforestation. Yet instead of stepping up, the US is dismantling forest protections and undermining global progress – highlighting the dangers of global forest policy that fails to hold the wealthiest, most powerful countries accountable. …But the latest actions by the US highlight just how dangerous and unbalanced this paradigm is. …Under the pretense of national security, Trump’s orders aim to gut environmental safeguards and fast-track industrial clearcutting in some of the US’s most precious and climate-critical forests. …Meanwhile, as Europe strengthens forest accountability, US state officials are pushing to exempt the country from new deforestation protections.. These officials, echoing industry talking points, are urging the EU to exclude US wood products from a law requiring due diligence to prevent imports or exports tied to deforestation or forest degradation. Their argument? That the US doesn’t need oversight.

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WildEarth Guardians Files Suit for Access to Forest Service Documents

By Ryan Talbott
WildEarth Guardians
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

PORTLAND, Oregon—This week WildEarth Guardians filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Forest Service for failing to provide Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) records about the agency’s plans to dramatically increase logging in the Pacific Northwest. The documents relate to the Forest Service’s “timber targets,” which is the amount of trees that each Forest Service region is expected to cut down each year. National Forests in Oregon and Washington are in the Pacific Northwest Region, or Region 6. …In February 2023, the Forest Service Chief in Washington, DC ordered an increase in the national timber target from 3 billion board feet (BBF) to 4 BBF per year. …In December 2023, the Forest Service announced its intent to amend the Northwest Forest Plan. The proposed amendment would weaken longstanding protections for wildlife in order to increase logging to meet those higher timber targets. …The purpose of WildEarth Guardians’ lawsuit is to get those withheld documents. 

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Meet the Coloradans Working To Save the West’s Wildfire-Ravaged Forests

By Elisabeth Kwak-Hefferan
5280 | The Denver Magazine
April 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

There are a number of ecological incentives for keeping the West forested. Trees stabilize soil, preventing flooding and landslides. They keep sediment out of rivers and streams, protecting aquatic habitats and drinking water. Forests help preserve mountain snowpack, replenishing groundwater reserves. They provide a home for wildlife, from bugs and birds to elk and black bears. And trees sequester carbon, a crucial tool in the fight against climate change. Beyond science, though, the desire to preserve forests feels deeply personal. “Forests are like Colorado’s DNA,” says Catherine Schloegel, watershed forest manager for the Colorado branch of the national nonprofit the Nature Conservancy. “We love to hike in them, bike in them, ski through the trees. They’re a huge reason why we live here. The legacy of Colorado is our forests.”

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Controversial logging bill makes it through Oregon committee

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
March 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Lawmakers have moved forward a controversial logging bill that could open the state up to lawsuits if Oregon doesn’t log enough timber in a given year. Representatives in the House Committee on Natural Resources unanimously advanced House Bill 3103 early Monday. The bill would allow counties and the timber industry to sue the state forester if Oregon logs less than the Department of Forestry forecasts in its once-a-decade estimates. There are exceptions if a large mass of trees are destroyed by wildfires, diseases or storms… Every decade, the Oregon Department of Forestry estimates how much timber it could log from state land for the next 10 years. Timber industry representatives and county officials say the department tends to over-promise and under deliver, making it difficult for them to plan ahead.

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Wilderness permits for Oregon parks returns despite uncertainty over ranger staffing

By Zach Urness
The Register-Guard
March 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The sometimes controversial permit system meant to limit crowds in three of Oregon’s most popular wilderness areas will return this summer, despite questions about who will enforce the system following widespread layoffs and another round of anticipated cuts to the U.S. Forest Service… The agency stated: “For the Deschutes, we will still have a wilderness ranger presence this summer. We also have a dedicated cadre of trained volunteer wilderness backcountry rangers who focus on education and mitigating impacts as well as a robust volunteer group that staffs wilderness trailheads to ensure awareness of and to gain compliance with the permit system (including redirecting people who do not have permits to other opportunities within the 60 available self-issued permit wilderness trailheads).”

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As wildfire season approaches, budget woes and federal uncertainty have put states’ plans at risk

By Martha Bellisle
Associated Press
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Dave Upthegrove

SEATTLE — Budget woes, combined with cuts to the federal wildfire-fighting workforce and President Donald Trump’s tariff and sovereignty threats against Canada, have made it more difficult for state officials to plan for the upcoming wildfire season. In Washington, a $12 billion budget shortfall prompted majority Democrats in the Legislature this week to propose slicing spending on wildfire prevention and fighting by one-third to two-thirds. “These massive cuts are putting lives and homes at greater risk,” said state Department of Natural Resources Commissioner Dave Upthegrove. …Meanwhile, tensions between the U.S. and Canada over Trump’s proposed tariffs and calls to make the country the U.S.’s 51st state have also complicated wildfire planning, especially in border states, Geissler said. Washington state has maintained a solid relationship with British Columbia for decades, but it’s unclear how firefighting will work if the borders are closed due to federal tensions, he said.

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Outbreaks of Forest Pests Expected During Warm Years

By Kristy Burnett
Pagosa Daily Post
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The annual forest health report, released today by the Colorado State Forest Service, assesses the condition of Colorado’s forests during another warm, dry year for the state. Following a wet and cool year in 2023, the shift back to near-record temperatures and below-average precipitation in Colorado last year stressed trees needing several years of mild conditions to build defenses against attack from forest pests. Bark beetles and other insects are building populations in forests across the state and changing fuel dynamics for wildfire as they leave dead and dying trees in their wake. “Trees in Colorado can’t catch a break as our climate becomes warmer and dryer in Colorado,” said Matt McCombs, state forester and director of the CSFS. …The 2024 Report on the Health of Colorado’s Forests details what insects and diseases remain the most prevalent forest health issues and where they are increasing their footprints, as well as the science behind the management actions taken to promote wildfire-resilient forests and healthy watersheds.

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Colorado Forest Service measures forest carbon emissions

By Rebekah Barry
The Rocky Mountain Collegian
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A recent study published by the Colorado State Forest Service took a deeper look into the impact of Colorado’s trees and how they store carbon. The findings reported that some of Colorado’s forests release more carbon than they draw due to dying trees that are actively decomposing. …it should be kept in mind that this data applies to recent years, and results fluctuate and can be nuanced. “(The) bigger picture of this report found that Colorado’s forests hold a lot of carbon, and that continues to this day, and it’s just in recent years that it’s releasing slightly more carbon than it adds,” Vorster said. “But when you just put it in perspective, if you were to compare the amount of carbon that it holds compared to what it releases, it’s like 0.06%, so a very tiny fraction of it at least every year. … It’s pretty close to a balance.”

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Oldest whitebark pine tolerates Idaho’s harsh climate, crucial for ecosystems

By Anna Daly
BoiseDev
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

IDAHO — The Western Pine may be Idaho’s state tree – but… the Whitebark Pine survives harsh weather conditions and can live over 1,000 years and grow over 90 feet tall. …In addition to feeding several birds and mammals, the tree provides shelter and nest sites for many animals including deer and elk. It is also key to helping with Idaho’s water supply. …Another interesting fact about the Whitebark Pine is that it relies solely on the bird – the Clark’s nutcracker – to reproduce. “Carrying the seeds in a pouch under its tongue, the bird buries them in shallow soil caches, sometimes up to 10 km away,” the National Park Service notes on its website. “Nutcrackers are known to cache up to 90,000+ seeds in a good seed crop year!” These trees are very slow-growing. …In 2022, the Whitebark Pine was officially listed as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. 

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Oregon’s New Defensible-Space Standards Don’t Apply to Every Property, But They Should

By Steve Wilent
The Woodsman’s Take
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Steve Wilent

The State of Oregon’s Wildfire Risk Explorer map was finalized in January, along with new defensible-space standards. A home-hardening building code (regulations designed to make homes more resilient to wildfire) is in draft form. …One Oregon lawmaker has proposed revising the map so risk levels apply broad areas rather than indicating the risk on individual properties. I’m sympathetic to the opposition to the map, etc., but scrapping it would be a mistake. …All tax lots in the state are assigned one of three wildfire hazard classes: Low, Moderate, or High; US Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and other public lands also are rated. …Despite the sharp criticism, this effort is a much-needed and well-intentioned project. …However, there’s a big problem: The owners of the other 94 percent of tax lots—roughly 1,786,000—rated at Low or Moderate hazard will not be required to take any action to create defensible-space around their homes or businesses.

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Wood is key to building. Importing it is worse than responsible Washington logging – Opinion

By Amy Harding
The News Tribune
March 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Pacific Northwest is fortunate to have vast forests and ideal conditions for growing trees quickly. These forests have long been a cornerstone of our rural economies while also protecting streams, sequestering carbon and supporting wildlife. However, we face a troubling trend: a decline in local timber production and a growing reliance on imported lumber. We use science for active forest management with the toughest regulations in the world, we do forestry the best here. It’s time to prioritize local timber and rebuild a robust, sustainable industry right here in Washington… Prioritizing local wood production is a win-win for the Pacific Northwest. Wood is good, but local wood is best if we want to restore a vital, create economic stability and protect our environment.

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What will Trump’s order on logging mean for Montana’s timber industry?

By Ellis Juhlin
mtpr.org
March 26, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

It’s a cold day at Sun Mountain Lumber in Deer Lodge, Montana. Outreach Forester Sean Steinebach walks toward the mill’s massive kiln where freshly cut two-by-fours are dried. You can feel the heat radiating off the fresh boards. He stops and inhales. “It smells fresh and it smells bright and it smells wild,” he says. The mill’s lumber yard is filled with stacks of Douglas fir and lodgepole pine logs that will soon become lumber. Having a steady and reliable supply of logs is crucial to keeping the mill in business, says Steinebach. “We drive the economics of Powell County for sure, Anaconda, Deer Lodge County. We’ve got a lot of employees that live there. Granite County, we’ve got employees there. We’re a big impact in the whole state, I think. Forest products in general is a huge impact in the state of Montana.”

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New York’s forests are migrating. Here’s what the future might bring.

By Roger Hannigan Gilson
The Times Union
March 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

At Edmund Niles Huyck Preserve in rural Albany County, the white spruce trees are struggling. Planted in the 1920s at what was then the southern part of the trees’ range, the plot now has no white spruce saplings, and “the adults are not doing well either,” said Andrei Lapenas, a professor at the University at Albany’s Transformational & Ecosystem-based Climate Adaptation. Lapenas, said higher temperatures from climate change have slowed older trees’ growth, while younger trees are being out-competed by the mature ones. Meanwhile, a different species, red spruce, has established itself in the preserve… He speculated that in the next 20 to 40 years, the preserve “will be overtaken by other tree species, and red spruce is a good candidate for this.”

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Missoula County Backs Acquisition of Blackfoot Timberlands

By Martin Kidston
Missoula Current
April 1, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Nearly 18,000 acres in the lower Blackfoot River watershed prized for its habitat and wood products could become publicly owned if the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) follows through with its planned acquisition. Missoula County last week signed a letter of support backing the BLM’s proposed acquisition of the former private industrial timberland in the Gold and Twin Creek drainages northeast of Missoula. Chet Crowser, chief lands and communities officer with the county, said that acquiring the parcels would permanently protect public ownership and provide benefits for decades to come… More than 60% of Missoula County is covered with public lands – lands the county claims sustain local economies through restoration and active management.

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A Look At New York State’s Ambitious Goal To Plant 25 Million Trees

By Noël Fletcher
Forbes
March 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

New York has a new interactive web tool to track the state’s progress in an ambitious goal by Gov. Kathy Hochul to have people plant 25 million trees within a nine-year period. The new online “Tree Tracker” enables state residents to self-identify as a private landowners, group members, paid professionals, municipality workers or state agency employees and input information about their tree planting. “New York is taking decisive action to protect our environment and strengthen communities’ ability to withstand severe weather,” Hochul noted in statement unveiling the online tool last month. “Our progress toward the 25 Million Tree goal is a testament to the power of community-driven action, and the new Tree Tracker will make it easier for New Yorkers to track our progress, share updates and contribute to a healthier environment for the future.”

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Allegheny National Forest could see more logging under Trump, local officials hope

By Abigail Hakas
Pittsburgh Union Progress
March 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

PITTSBURG, Pennsylvania — Local officials are pushing for more logging in Pennsylvania’s only national forest, and the federal government might grant their wish. President Trump warned of a reliance on imported wood amid threat of Canadian lumber tariffs and called for more logging in federal forests. The Allegheny National Forest spans over 500,000 acres, drawing thousands of people for camping, hunting, boating and other outdoor activities. Local officials can’t rely on property tax from the federal land, but they do receive a 25% share of revenue from timber sales in their counties. mOfficials hope for increased timber sales to generate more cash for their budgets. …U.S. Rep. Glenn Thompson, R-Centre County, “I welcome reforms that will ensure a robust forest industry, strengthen rural economies and benefit local education.” …“I am in favor of [increased logging], but it has to be done wisely. You can’t overcut,” said Ken Klakamp, Warren County commissioner.

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Conservation Groups sue U.S. Forest Service over controversial Nantahala-Pisgah Forest Plan

The Southern Environmental Law Center
March 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

ASHEVILLE, N.C. — A coalition of conservation groups sued the U.S. Forest Service over its Nantahala-Pisgah Forest Plan, arguing the agency violated federal law by downplaying the harmful impacts of a dramatic expansion in logging and by failing to include binding standards to restore important native ecosystems. The Plan guides the long-term future of North Carolina’s Nantahala and Pisgah National Forests… The Nantahala-Pisgah Forest Plan outlines where activities like logging and roadbuilding will occur and sets objectives for future timber harvests. The Plan will determine what happens on these Forests for a generation. The Forest Service was handed a collaboratively developed Forest Plan proposal that allowed for logging while minimizing harmful impacts. However, the agency rejected the compromise out of hand in favor of a Plan that aims to quintuple the amount of logging in the Nantahala and Pisgah National Forests and expand logging and roadbuilding into sensitive habitats. 

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Former Head Of Oklahoma Forestry Department Speaks Out Following Firing

By Christian Hans
News9.com
March 31, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Mark Goeller

OKLAHOMA — The former head of the Oklahoma Forestry Service is speaking out after he was fired by Gov. Kevin Stitt for his agency’s response to a wildfire outbreak earlier this month. Mark Goeller, who was let go by the state on March 26, posed on social media Sunday evening, claiming he has been falsely accused of not meeting the standards required by his position. …”The Agency to which I dedicated over 40 years of my life was said to have performed poorly. Preparations were made well in advance, the public was notified of the impending fire danger, firefighting resources were ordered and in place.” He said nothing was held back regarding his agency’s response to the wildfires, and it was because of their efforts the fires were not as impactful as they could have been.

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Historic ice storm cripples northern Michigan, leaves 90,000 without power

By Myesha Johnson and Anne Snabes
The Detroit News
March 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

MICHIGAN — A crippling ice storm in northern Michigan has knocked out power to at least 90,000 residential and business customers. As of midday Sunday, half an inch to three-quarters of an inch of ice had accumulated in much of northeast Lower Michigan, and an inch and a half had accumulated in Elmira, near Gaylord. …Virtually all customers of the Presque Isle Electric & Gas Co-op and Alpena Power Co. were without power Sunday, some for more than 30 hours. Presque Isle reported about 32,000 electric members and reported about 32,000 outages. Alpena Power serves about 16,750 electric customers covering 250 square miles in the northeastern Lower Peninsula of Michigan and said 99% of its customers were without power. The two utilities serve much of Michigan’s northeastern Lower Peninsula. “This storm is unlike anything we have experienced,” Presque Ile co-op president and CEO Allan Berg said.

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Women in the Woods program seeks to boost female participation in forestry

Bty Applied and Natural Sciences
Louisiana Tech University News
March 28, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The Women in the Woods program, developed by Louisiana Tech University professors Dr. Heidi Adams and Dr. Nan Nan, is designed to encourage young women to explore careers in forestry through mentorship, community outreach, and hands-on learning. The initiative, supported by the USDA NIFA Women and Minorities in STEM Fields Program, has recently received a $200,000 grant. “Our goal is to create an inclusive, supportive environment for young women interested in forestry,” said Adams. “This program offers real-world insights into the profession and inspires young women to consider forestry as a viable career path.” A recent survey of female college students with forestry-related leadership experience found that many women do not view forestry as a potential career because they rarely see women represented in the field.

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Oklahoma Firefighters react after Governor Stitt fires head of forestry department

By Elizabeth Fitz
News on 6
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Mark Goeller

Gov. Stitt announced the firing of the State Forester earlier this week, citing concerns about the department’s response to the fires that have burned across the state. Following the announcement, multiple fire stations and firefighters posted on social media in support of Mark Goeller, head of the Forestry Department. “I was extremely surprised when I saw the news that Mark Goeller got fired,” said Tulsa Fire Department Engine Captain Shawn Clark. Clark said he also works as an AD firefighter with the forestry department. When asked about Goeller’s departure, Stitt said, “As far as Mark’s departure, we had a horrible, horrible wildfire in the state of Oklahoma and didn’t think they did a really good job.”  Goeller served in the department for more than 40 years.  …When asked what he would like to see happen, he replied, “I’d really like to see Mark reinstated.” 

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AI-powered drones track down fires in German forests

By Stebastien Ash
Phys.org
March 30, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

GERMANY — Inside a green orb planted in the German countryside is a high-tech aid to prevent wildfires. The installation, resembling a giant golf ball covered in solar panels, is the hangar for an AI-powered drone that its developer hopes one day will be able to sniff out and extinguish new blazes in minutes. “Fires are spreading much faster and more aggressively than in the past,” Carsten Brinkschulte, the CEO of the German firm Dryad, said at a demonstration of the technology. …Dryad is in the running with 29 other teams from around the globe for a multi-million-dollar prize to develop the ability to autonomously put out fires within 10 minutes. During Dryad’s demonstration on Thursday—the first for a computer-steered wildfire detection drone according to the company—chemicals in smoke from burning wood were picked up by sensors distributed in the forest.

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First 1,000 fungi on International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List reveal growing threats

International Union for Conservation
March 27, 2025
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Gland, Switzerland – The number of fungi species on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species has surpassed 1,000, confirming that deforestation, agricultural expansion and urban development are driving these species to decline worldwide. The IUCN Red List now includes 169,420 species, of which 47,187 are threatened with extinction. The addition of 482 newly assessed fungi species brings their number on the IUCN Red List to 1,300, of which at least 411 are at risk of extinction. “Fungi are the unsung heroes of life on Earth – yet they have long been overlooked. …we have taken a vital step forward: over 1,000 of the world’s 155,000 known fungal species have now been assessed for the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, the most comprehensive source of information on extinction risk. Now, it’s time to turn this knowledge into action and safeguard the extraordinary fungal kingdom,” said Dr Grethel Aguilar, IUCN Director General.

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