Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Canada’s Forest Sector Responds to Activists’ Report on Forest Carbon Emissions

Forest Products Association of Canada
September 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

The Forest Products Association of Canada issued a statement regarding a carbon emissions report released by anti-forestry activists: The Canadian government’s approach to forest carbon reporting and accounting continues to be based on science and evidence. The approach is consistent with the guidelines of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. …Our most recent wildfire season and the devastation we saw in the Town of Jasper are clear reminders that Canada needs to scale-up proactive measures, to help reduce the risk of wildfire. Forest management is a critical tool to help us achieve this – along with fire shed mapping, creating more fire breaks, and turning more to thinning treatments and prescribed and cultural burning. …This important work will require a whole of society approach that includes Canadian forestry workers and active forest management as part of the solution for both the environment and our economy.

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Building Resiliency Against Wildfires

By Forestry For The Future
Maclean’s Magazine
September 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Wildfire season has become a fact of life in recent years; every summer, wildfires erupt and threaten ecosystems, communities and our health—and now are further accelerated by climate change and forest fuel buildup. The recent devastation in Jasper National Park is a solemn reminder of this impact. Now more than ever, we need a “whole of society” approach to a problem we can no longer ignore. Governments, industry, communities and the forest sector must work together to implement sustainable forest management practices; ones that protect the forests and ensure they remain places for future generations to live, work and play in. By looking at B.C. in particular, where high-intensity wildfires ravaged the landscape last year, the importance of making wildfire resiliency a primary focus becomes clear.

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News & Views from the Forest Stewardship Council

Forest Stewardship Council Canada
September 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

In this newsletter you’ll find these headlines and more:

  • Participate in a Survey on Cross-Border FSC Credit/Percentage System
  • Just a few short weeks away! Register for FSC Forest Week 2024 – September 21-27, 2024
  • Hitting the Books – Back to School with FSC
  • Register now for the 2024 FSC North America conference
  • FSC International Announces General Assembly in Panama City, Panama for 2025
  • Consultation on Revision of FSC’s Chain of Custody standards
  • Wonder how the FSC certification system works? Check out this new video.

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Management of Old Forests on Quadra Island

BC Forest Practices Board
September 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA – An investigation into a complaint has found that the management of old-growth forests on Quadra Island needs to be improved to ensure enough old forests will be present on the island in the future. A representative of the Discovery Islands Forest Conservation Project complained to the Forest Practices Board that the remnants of old forest on Quadra Island are at risk of being harvested. The board investigated timber harvesting carried out by TimberWest Forest Corp., Okisollo Resources Ltd. and Younger Brothers Holdings. “While we found that each of the licensees did not comply with some aspect of forestry legislation, the bigger issue is that no one is responsible for monitoring or ensuring that Quadra Island’s old forests are conserved, or that enough mature forests are protected from logging so they can develop into old forest in the future,” said Keith Atkinson, chair, Forest Practices Board.

Mosaic Forest Management Press Release: Management of Old Forests on Quadra Island – Forest Practices Board Update

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Lament for the Land

By William L. Wagner, PhD, Civic Forester
Tree Frog Submitted Editorial
September 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A few years after the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives published Robert “Bob” Arthur Williams’, “Restoring Forestry in B.C.”, four aged and scarred reformers met to ruminate over the future of B.C.’s forested lands. We were an unusual group. Bob Williams had been the Minister of Lands, Forests, and Water Resources during the historic first term of a NDP government… Another, Raymond “Ray” Travers, RPF, acknowledged by Bob as his advisor in forestry matters while serving as Minister. Further, Bob stated that the “Restoring” paper “…would not have been possible without his continuing deep knowledge and advice…”.  The other two in the room were Ronald Molander, an innovative semi-retired Port Alberni lumberman with considerable expertise in forest products industries, then there was the author, a semi-retired forest research economist. We had one notion in common: B.C.’s experiment in public forestry was failing and we felt it required major reform. We wanted to develop an alternative.

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Tolko’s contract loggers in Southern Interior return to work

By Chelsey Mutter
Castanet
September 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

After weeks of what one community advocate calls “stringing contractors along,” contract loggers for Tolko will return to work Monday. Angie Clowry is an advocate from a former logging family. Tolko director of communications Kyle Happy confirmed Southern Interior scales have been closed since July 22 to get inventories in line and manage log quality, cost and market risks. …“These decisions are not taken lightly; however, are necessary to sustain our business for the future,” said Happy. Tolko will be taking deliveries on Sept. 9. …Clowry says contract loggers are frustrated over how the situation was handled by Tolko. “I realize they’re a business and they’re forecasting, but they also have to remember that this is money that is super important to all these families. …Tolko also confirmed that contractors in the Cariboo region remain shut down as inventory levels are high.

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Researching owl habitat suitability in post-fire forests in Okanagan

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
September 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Kamloops, BC — The Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation is proud to announce over $8.5 million in funding for 178 fish and wildlife conservation and conservation stewardship projects across B.C. this year, with more than $1.5M allocated to projects in the Thompson Okanagan region. Among this year’s projects in the Thompson Okanagan region is a two-year study of how wildfires of different ages affect the distribution of owls in the Okanagan Valley. “Owls help regulate prey populations and are culturally significant to local Indigenous communities. They are threatened by wildfire, which removes forest features needed for breeding and hunting,” says project leader Karen Hodges of the University of British Columbia Okanagan. The project will survey which owl species are present in post-fire forests to determine where owl nests and what they eat in these burned landscapes to determine what features of burned forests are essential for habitat conservation.

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How Prescribed Fire is Helping Enhance Stone’s Sheep Habitat in Northeastern B.C.

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
September 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia – In the remote, rugged, Northeastern terrain of B.C., nearly half of the world’s Stone’s sheep habitat can be found. These sheep and the ecosystem surrounding them have been supported through careful forest management practices since the 1970s. One such practice, jointly funded in recent years by the Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation and Forest Enhancement Society of BC, is prescribed burning. …In May 2024, before the summer season of wildfires experienced throughout the province, Ridgeline Wildlife Enhancement Inc., on behalf of the Wild Sheep Society of BC, worked on the project to undertake two prescribed burns. They successfully enhanced over 600 hectares or 1,400 acres of Stone’s sheep habitat using prescribed burning treatments. The resulting post-burn habitat will improve forage (food for sheep) quality and reduce dense shrub cover (so the sheep can see predators from a distance).

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Climate Change, Forest Fires and Water: An Ecohydrological Perspective

By UBC Okanagan News
The University of British Columbia
September 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

On September 12, 2024 at the Kelowna Innovation Centre, Dr. Keith Smettem, Emeritus Professor, University of Western Australia will present Climate Change, Forest Fires and Water: An Ecohydrological Perspective. After the forest fires and then landslides of 2021, the connection between wildfires and destructive water events is a vivid reality for many people living in BC. Now, UBC Okanagan is bringing in Australian expert, Dr. Keith Smettem, to explain the science between climate change, wildfires, water management and how they can permanently change landscapes. Dr. Smettem is a world leader in ecohydrology—the study of how the movement of water impacts the land. Hosted by UBCO’s Irving K. Barber Faculty of Science, Dr. Smettem will detail the connections of climate change, forests and water with his knowledge in ecohydrology. He will also discuss potential mitigation strategies for the Okanagan Valley.

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CN loses appeal of $16M penalty for causing destructive BC wildfire

By Andrew Weichel
CTV News Vancouver
September 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Canadian National Railway must pay the B.C. government $16.2 million for causing a destructive 2015 wildfire in the Fraser Canyon, the province’s highest court has ruled. B.C.’s fire manager determined the approximately 2,400-hectare blaze was sparked as a result of illegal rail cutting near Lytton – the community that would be devastated by another wildfire six years later – and ordered CN Rail to reimburse the province for lost land value, firefighting costs and other expenses in 2018. The company accepted responsibility for accidentally igniting the flames during a period of high winds and extreme fire danger, but challenged the amount of the penalty, accusing the B.C. Wildfire Service of exacerbating the situation with a controlled burn that led to additional spread. CN Rail’s arguments were first rejected by the province’s Forest Appeals Commission in 2020, then the B.C. Supreme Court in 2022, then the B.C. Court of Appeal last week.

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Port Alberni prepares to host inaugural Indigenous Forestry Conference

By Elena Rardon
The Alberni Valley News
September 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Robert Dennis Sr.

Port Alberni will be hosting Indigenous leaders, forestry professionals and policymakers from across the province for the first-ever Indigenous Forestry Conference. The inaugural event will take place Sept. 10 and 11, 2024. The event aims to optimize Indigenous participation in the forest economy by uniting leaders, forestry professionals and policymakers to discuss key issues and showcase successful Indigenous-led conservation initiatives. By highlighting both the successes and challenges faced by Indigenous communities, the conference aims to chart a course towards more inclusive and sustainable forestry management. Wahmeesh (Ken Watts), the elected Chief Councillor for Port Alberni’s Tseshaht First Nation… will be one of the event speakers, along with Dennis and Dallas Smith, the president of Nanwakolas Council in northern Vancouver Island. …There will also be some discussions on how traditional Indigenous knowledge can be merged with modern forestry practices.

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City backs Kitsumkalum forest licence transfer bid

By Rod Link
The Terrace Standard
September 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The City of Terrace is backing a bid by the Kitsumkalum First Nation to have three logging tenures tied to Skeena Sawmills transferred to its control. Although Kitsumkalum purchased the licences as part of the deal it struck to take the closed Skeena Sawmills out of bankruptcy this spring, control must now be formally transferred by the provincial government. That could take as long as six months and Kitsumkalum is now working through the necessary steps, Kitsumkalum deputy chief councillor Troy Sam told city councillors Aug. 22. “We’re in it for the long haul,” Sam told council. …He said there won’t be a resumption of operations anytime soon as Kitsumkalum continues to work on a business plan. But Kitsumkalum does want to start logging as soon as it can to raise the money to put an eventual business plan in place.

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CBC’s arguments against timber harvest make absolutely no sense

By Jamie Stephen, Managing Director at TorchLight Bioresources
LinkedIn
September 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Jamie Stephen

Oh, let me count the many reasons why this is completely false and CBC should be ashamed for presenting conjecture as fact [Logging is the 3rd highest emitter in Canada. It should be measured that way, a new report says] . The arguments against timber harvest make absolutely no sense, since it is wildfires that are by far Canada’s largest source of GHG emissions. Timber that is harvested can’t burn in a wildfire and active management of forests reduces wildfire risk (and associated GHG emissions). Let’s look at reality, rather than an ideological position against forestry by three people with ZERO background in forest management and financed by US interests. First, who owns Canada’s forest resource? 94% is publicly-owned, which means it is the provinces, not the ‘logging’ (i.e., forest products) industry that is ultimately responsible for land management decisions. Canada is by far the world leader in certified, sustainably managed forests. No one is claiming that timber harvest for forest products in Canada leads to deforestation.

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Invasive fungus that kills elm trees detected in Edmonton for first time, city says

By Wallis Snowdon
CBC News
September 3, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Dutch elm disease has been detected for the first time in Edmonton, leaving thousands of trees vulnerable to a fatal infestation the city expects to fight for years to come. The fungus has been detected in several trees in the Killarney neighbourhood in northeast Edmonton, and along the Yellowhead Corridor East. As of Aug. 30, a total of four trees have tested positive for the disease, the city said in a statement Tuesday. Dutch elm disease is a costly and deadly fungus that poses a threat to all species of elm trees in Alberta, including 90,000 elm trees owned by the city. In some of Edmonton’s mature neighbourhoods, boulevards are lined solely with old, sweeping elms. Mark Beare, the city’s director of infrastructure operations, said city staff are preparing for a prolonged battle with the destructive fungus.

Additional coverage in the Edmonton Journal: Dutch elm disease detected in Edmonton — how to prevent its spread

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Will we learn from our wildfire history?

By Joe Nemeth, BC Pulp and Paper Coalition
The Province
August 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BRITISH COLUMBIA — It’s as regular as it depressing. Every summer Canada suffers from major wildfires. …After a 10-week wildfire season in 2017, former BC Forests minister George Abbott filed a 108-recommendation report outlining steps the province could take to reduce wildfire risk. …These reports and others highlight challenges between levels of government, better training of firefighters, updated technology and equipment — and “fuel management.” …Canada — and BC — are pretty good at fighting wildfires, but we aren’t very good at minimizing their size, spread and duration. That’s where “fuel management” comes in. …Want an example of how big a difference fuel management can make? Look to Finland, a country that in latitude, geography and tree species is comparable with the B.C. Interior. …And guess what, the “fuel” — the brush and hazard trees thinned out through this common sense practice — is directed to Finnish pulp and paper mills to keep them running and competitive.

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Companies logged B.C. forests 170 times without authorization since 2021, records show

By Ainslie Cruickshank
The Narwhal
September 3, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In June, The Narwhal filed a freedom of information request asking for the total amount of unauthorized harvesting documented between Jan. 1, 2020 and June 10, 2024. While the requested records have not yet been released, a government official said the B.C. Forests Ministry may not be able to provide a clear picture of how many hectares forestry companies have logged without authorization in recent years. That’s because the province doesn’t consistently track unauthorized logging by forestry companies, according to information the official shared with The Narwhal through the freedom of information process. Some case files mention the volume of timber taken, while others quantify the area logged — and there’s no way to accurately convert volume to area or vice versa, the official explained.

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Wood boring beetles attacking Shuswap forests

By Jim Cooperman
Eagle Valley News
August 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

As climate chaos intensifies, B.C.’s forests are changing rapidly and not for the better as fires, drought, insects and diseases take their toll. Ministry of Forest Kamloops Region entomologist, Lorraine Maclauchlan and the Kootenay Boundary region staff began seeing woodborers attacking green Douglas-fir, Ponderosa pine, Larch and younger lodgepole pine trees. Last year, Lorraine did a small trapping trial and this year, larger trials are underway in the Southern Interior. They are using 12 combination panel-funnel traps at each site with various types of semiochemical compounds, including pheromones, to attract the beetles. Their goal is to determine which lure works best and to learn more about the diversity of the beetles in these damaged stands.

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Canadore College Sustainability Initiative named a national finalist

By Canador College
Cision Newswire
September 3, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

NORTH BAY, ON – Sustainable Canadore’s latest initiative, “Our Forest: A Living Lab for All,” is a finalist for an International Green Gown Award in the Nature Positive Category. The project focused on creating a 10-year forest management plan for the 460 acres of forested land at its College Drive campus. This is Sustainable Canadore’s second Living Labs project funded by Colleges and Institutes Canada through its ImpAct-Climate initiative. Using a boots-on-the ground approach, the project developed a forest inventory, data collection, and mapping on forest health, structure, and composition in order to obtain a Forest Council Stewardship certification.

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5 things to know about B.C.’s lucrative salvage logging industry

By Zoe Yunker
The Narwhal
August 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A relatively new industry is taking off in British Columbia, as forestry companies set their sights on logging burn zones after wildfires. It’s called salvage logging — and it may disrupt forests’ abilities to naturally recover from fires. B.C. rules allow companies to remove the last remaining living trees from burn zones. Those trees can offer critical support for healing ecosystems. Now some experts and affected communities, including First Nations, are raising the alarm and calling for more selective logging practices. The provincial government is clearing the way to make salvage logging even easier, giving companies a slew of profitable perks for harvesting areas burned in B.C. wildfires, including logging the remaining living trees at a discounted rate.

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New harvest level set near Squamish

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
August 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia’s deputy chief forester has set the new allowable annual cut (AAC) level for Tree Farm Licence 38 (TFL) located northwest of Squamish. The new AAC for the TFL is 117,500 cubic metres. This is a reduction from the previous AAC, while remaining well above the average annual harvest level since the last AAC determination, which has averaged just under 72,000 cubic metres per year. Factors that were considered in making this determination include supporting forestry, wildlife habitat, terrain stability, biodiversity, cultural resources and ensuring old-growth deferral areas are protected while a long-term management approach is developed. …The TFL overlaps the territory of five First Nations, including the Squamish Nation, Lil’wat Nation, Tsleil-Waututh Nation, Klahoose First Nation and the St’at’imc Chiefs Council, all of which were consulted during the timber supply review process. The deputy chief forester also sought and considered public and industry input.

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Forest Enhancement Society Newsletter

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
August 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West
In this newsletter:
  • Minister of Forests, Bruce Ralston, reflects on work being done by the forestry sector in B.C., by FESBC, and makes a farewell statement. 
  • BC Forest Safety Council safety tip and information on upcoming events and awards. 
  • A partnership between FESBC and the Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation enhances wildlife habitat in BC.
  • BC Forestry June Tour video.
  • Faces of Forestry meet Ken Day.

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Calling all grads from the UBC Forestry Classes of 1983 and 1984!

By Candace Parsons
UBC Faculty of Forestry
August 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A joint 40 year reunion is being planned for the UBC Forestry classes of 1983 and 1984.  There are a number of people who are Lost in the Woods … if you are already in contact with us, great!  If this is the first you are hearing about the reunion (and you are interested in attending) … please email us at 1983reunion1984@gmail.com The reunion will be held on Saturday, October 19, 2024 on the UBC campus (most likely in the Forest Sciences Centre).  A number of activities are being planned during the day and there will be an evening social as well.  We hope you can join us! Your reunion planning team …Class of 1983 (Candace Parsons and Carmen Rida) and Class of 1984 (Bruce Blackwell and Eleanor McWilliams)

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Ontario Superior Court rejects $5-million claim in forest management dispute

By Bernise Carolino
The Law Times
September 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Superior Court of Justice of Ontario dismissed a $5-million claim brought against the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (MNRF) and ordered the plaintiff to pay the Crown $35,000 in costs. This case involved forestry operations performed by the MNRF’s subcontractor in July 2009 in the Lac Seul Forest in Echo Township, Ontario. …The subcontractor trespassed on the plaintiff’s property, which pushed debris and small trees onto his land. …A handwritten but unsigned document dated Aug. 6, 2009 proposed a settlement including restoration work by the subcontractor. …In November 2009, the plaintiff and others formed the Eco Bio-Regional Wilderness Council, which aimed to influence the management of forests in Echo Township. The plaintiff made claims on the council’s behalf. In 2016, the court determined that the plaintiff lacked the standing to bring these claims on the council’s behalf, including any public interest claims against the MNRF.

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Residents hope a road that threatened old-growth forest will be rerouted

By Moira Donovan
CBC News
September 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Ron Cousins

NOVA SCOTIA — A resident of Kentville, N.S., who was concerned that the town’s plans for a future connector road to support the construction of new housing would result in the destruction of old-growth forest on his property is hopeful that the road can be rerouted… Last year, the Town of Kentville told Kentville resident, Ron Cousins it required nearly half a hectare of the land on that edge of his property to expand an existing service road into a connector road for new development — and that it would expropriate the land if necessary. After months of campaigning by Cousins and his advocates — attending council meetings, contacting politicians, and launching petitions — the town is considering other routes, a change Cousins hopes will mean permanent protection for the forest.

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American Forests awards over $25 million in grants to 36 urban and community projects to promote tree equity

By American Forests
Cision PRWeb
September 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

WASHINGTON — American Forests, the oldest national conservation organization in the US, announced they are distributing over $25 million in grants from to 36 communities for equitable urban and community forestry projects via its Tree Equity Catalyst Fund. The funding, a portion of $50 million received from the USDA Forest Service, Urban and Community Forestry Program as part of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA), will help bring the many benefits of trees and urban greening to communities across the country, especially those that have been historically disadvantaged. These investments are critical — according to American Forests’ renowned Tree Equity Score, lower-income communities tend to have 26% less tree cover and are almost 6°F hotter than wealthier ones. Communities of color – regardless of income – tend to have 38% less tree cover and are 13°F hotter than white communities.

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Oregon House Republicans target forests for wildfire reform as grass and shrubland burns

By Alex Baumhardt
Oregon Capital Chronicle
September 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

As Oregon heads into another hot weekend, Oregon House Republicans are calling on the state Legislature to reform forest management and logging policies they say would prevent large fires from starting and spreading… In a letter sent Wednesday, representatives said lawmakers should roll back regulations and conservation plans to allow more logging on state forests, limit liabilities for volunteer firefighters who might cause injury or property damage while on the job and prohibit and sweep homeless encampments in fire prone areas… “Oregon’s war on the timber industry must end,” the Republicans wrote. “The logging industry plays a vital role in clearing out deadwood and decreasing the severity of fires. Seven sawmills have closed this year due to anti-business policies. Republicans support reforming burdensome regulations while treating the lumber industry as partners in conservation.”

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Wildfire season isn’t over, Oregon Department of Forestry warns

By John Ross Ferrara
KOIN 6 News
September 5, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The Oregon Department of Forestry is warning the public to remain cautious and safe as the risk of wildfire remains high across the Pacific Northwest. The Oregon Department of Forestry wants to remind Oregonians that with weather fluctuating across the state, fire is still on the landscape and fire season is still in effect,” the ODFW announced on Sept. 5. “Oregon is still experiencing one of the worst seasons we’ve seen in the past decade, and the department warns the public against complacency.”

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State’s climate chief says ‘compromise’ may be in the works for Mount Washington forest project after top officials tour site

By Heather Bellow
The Berkshire Eagle
September 1, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

State foresters say their project will help the land and help curb the effects of climate change. But some environmentalists, climate scientists, town officials and a growing number of residents don’t agree, and want the land largely left alone… The project involves killing invasives like barberry that are running amok, and preparation to cut dead and dying trees that are infested with pests like the emerald ash borer and spongy moth. It also involves cutting that will open up areas of the forest for new trees so there is variation in future that will help sequester carbon. The forest cutting plan says it will yield 458 Mbf, or thousand board feet, from a variety of trees including sugar maple, as well as 350 cords of wood.

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Silicon Valley Wants to Fight Fires With Fire

By Tim Fernholz
The New York Times
August 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Credit: Ian C. Bates

What happens if you set a region full of technology entrepreneurs and investors on fire? They start companies. Dozens of start-ups, backed by climate-minded investors with more than $200 million in capital, are developing technology designed to tackle a fundamental challenge of the warming world… For years, the response to wildfires was simple: Put them out. But this strategy has unnaturally stockpiled biomass — a catchall term for trees, brush and grass — in California forests. In recent decades, foresters and firefighters have realized that battling wildfires requires “treating” their fuel in advance: thinning forests and underbrush with mechanical tools and controlled — or prescribed — burns. There’s just one problem: “There aren’t enough hands,” said Kate Dargan, a former CalFire chief. “This is not a high-paying industry, it’s a hot, dirty, hard industry … where technology can help assist human production capability, it’s really important.” [To access the full story, you may need to create a New York Times free account]

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Managing Coastal Fog Belt Forests with Fire in Mind

By Aaron Groth and Carrie Berger
Oregon State University
August 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Credit: Micah Schmidt

The coastal fog belt is a narrow environmental band that hugs Oregon’s coastline. It can extend about 20 miles inland and up to elevations of about 500 feet. In other areas, it may be only a few miles wide. Due to its proximity to the ocean, this ecoregion has a temperate climate. Winters are wet, and summers are often foggy. Despite their generally cool, moist conditions, these forests produce a lot of fuel and can burn at high intensity when weather conditions feature low relative humidity, high temperatures, sustained wind speeds and an ignition source. Most fires burn under moderate conditions and are extinguished at less than 1 acre. Historically, the coastal fog belt forests burned infrequently — every 300–1,000 years — and at high-severity (stand-replacing crown fire). Well-documented large fires occurred in the late 1800’s to mid-1900’s. In addition to wildfire, windthrow, flooding, landslides, pests and diseases can also disturb these forests.

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Southern pine beetle outbreak poses threat to Alabama forests, economy

By Shanteya Hudson
MSN
September 3, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Alabama’s economy is heavily supported by its forestry industry – but is facing a new challenge, with a widespread outbreak of the southern pine beetle. This native pest is known for its ability to rapidly destroy pine trees. The Alabama Forestry Commission reports that it has already affected numerous counties, particularly in the northern half of the state. Drew Metzler, forest health coordinator at the commission, said the outbreak this year is the most widespread Alabama has seen since 2001. …But these beetles aren’t just impacting Alabama. Metzler said neighboring states, such as Mississippi, Georgia, and South Carolina, are also experiencing outbreaks. … Metzlers said the beetles aren’t just making their way through forests, but onto private land as well. He said to combat the southern pine beetle outbreak, it’s important to consider preventive measures.

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Ashfield event in Ashfield to explore ‘Forests as Climate Solutions’

By Madison Schofield
The Greenfield Recorder
September 3, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

ASHFIELD, Massachusetts — The town Energy Committee, Citizen’s Climate Lobby and the First Congregational Church of Ashfield are inviting the community to talk about trees, why they are important and what can be done to protect them. “Forests as Climate Solutions: Proforestation, Land Conservation and Climate Smart Forestry Practices,” a presentation with climate scientists and forestry specialists, is set for Saturday, September 14. …The talk will include four experts. William Moomaw, professor emeritus at Tufts University’s Fletcher School will detail how forests are good for the environment. Dicken Crane, Woodlands Partnership of Northwest Massachusetts board chair, will discuss how forests can be safely cut to support other human endeavors. Sally Loomis, Hilltown Land Trust executive director, will share different options for landowners. And Mary Wigmore of Wigmore Forest Resource Management will speak about forestry and landscaping methods.

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Welcome seeds of compromise in Mount Washington forestry project debate

By the Editorial Team
The Berkshire Eagle
September 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Pittsfield, Massachusetts — a forestry management plan in South County has attracted criticism from local residents and environmental activists. At issue is the Department of Conservation and Recreation’s forest cutting plan at the so-called “Cattle Barn Lot” in Mount Washington. …DCR has outlined a 275-acre project area where the agency hopes to …”produce immediate and maximize long-term income, enhance wildlife habitat, improve recreational opportunities, protect soil and water quality, or produce forest specialty products.”  …We’re heartened to see state officials and local stakeholders confronting their disagreements in a healthy way to find a path of compromise for this project. In a corner of the commonwealth that often feels overlooked by the powers that be in Boston, it was refreshing to see several Healey administration environmental and forestry leaders make the trip to South County and hear residents’ concerns. 

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Wildlife foundation to restore and expand Mississippi forest

By Dakota Smith
Woodworking Industry News
August 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) announced $2.5 million in grants to improve, restore, and expand important forest and wetland habitats in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley. The projects supported by the grants will enhance and restore private and public land through the installation of water management infrastructure, landowner technical assistance, tree establishment, and wetland reconstruction. The grants will also increase the capacity of a bottomland hardwood nursery to supply seedlings for other projects in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley. Collectively, more than 4.2 million bottomland hardwood seedlings will be planted, and 3,900 acres of existing hardwood forest will be restored with wildlife-friendly forest treatments.

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U.S. files complaint against logger, logging company for timber trespass on Monongahela National Forest

The Dominion Post
August 28, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

WEST VIRGINIA — The US Attorney’s office has filed a civil lawsuit against a Randolph County logger and logging company for trespassing and cutting down approximately 10 acres of timber on the Monongahela National Forest near Slaty Fork, Pocahontas County. According to the complaint, John R. Fox and Fox Logging submitted paperwork to timber 319 acres of private property that borders the Monongahela National Forest in Pocahontas County. Fox allegedly began logging in 2015 and continued until at least 2019. During that time, the logging operation is alleged to have encroached on nearly 10 acres of the forest, resulting in the timbering of more than 45,500 cubic feet of mature hardwood and pine saw timber valued at nearly $28,000. …The government is seeking $80,189 in monetary damages, as well as compensatory and punitive damages. Trial is scheduled to begin Oct. 20, 2025.

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Logging by another name – ‘Forest Gardening’

By Gary Murray, Jim Everett-puralia meenamatta, Chris Taylor and David Lindenmayer
Pearls and Irritations
September 6, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Although the Victorian Government announced it was halting native forest logging in January 2024, several kinds of logging are continuing in the state. One of these kinds of logging is known by another name: “Forest Gardening”… The term Forest Gardening is not a First Nations concept. Rather, the term and concept was first used by Robert Hart, an English horticulturalist (Whitefield 1996), but it is now being applied to what are to date industrial logging operations… The underlying rationale for Forest Gardening and Cultural Thinning in Australian forests is that they are “overgrown”. That is, there are too many trees and the understorey is too dense. In contrast, the pre-British invasion forest was open and park-like.

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Forestry Australia says Queensland Government have jumped gun on Greater Glider Forest Park

By Forestry Australia
Australia Rural and Regional News
September 4, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Forestry Australia is disappointed the Miles Labor Government is jumping the gun in declaring a Greater Glider Forest Park. Forestry Australia’s Acting President Dr Bill Jackson said while Forestry Australia supports conserving threatened species and habitats, the new commitment has been made without consultation, sound evidence or the application of good governance principles. The comments come in the wake of Environment Minister Leanne Linard announcing 54,000 hectares of greater glider habitat in South East Queensland state forest will be transitioned to a new natural capital tenure. “The Queensland Sustainable Timber Industry Framework was established two months ago to provide government advice and it is due to run until the middle of 2025,” Dr Jackson said. …“The assumption that harvesting timber from native forests is necessarily harmful to biodiversity is not correct and there is indeed strong evidence that forests need to be managed actively.

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Our forest has more than tripled in size in a hundred years

By Bard Amundsen
Forskning
August 30, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Norway now has more than one billion cubic meters of tree trunks, according to information from Landskogtakseringen and Statistics Norway. That is a 10 percent increase in just the last ten years. And a tremendous increase looking back around a hundred years. Few countries in the world have as good an overview of their forests as Norway.With the Landskogtakseringen from 1919, Norway were the first in the world to start monitoring the forest at a national level. Since then, forests and other areas throughout the country have been surveyed ten times. The 11th round of valuation is now underway… However, in the last five years, researchers have seen that the increase in forest volume has been slower than previously.

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Ireland to fall far short of forestry targets again this year

By Azmia Riaz
Irish Independent
September 2, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Ireland is set to miss its annual forestry target once again this year. According to a report by Social, Economic Environmental Forestry Association of Ireland (SEEFA), 1,024 ha have been planted in the year so far — trailing far behind the target of 8,000ha. “Planting continues to disappoint, it is now beyond doubt that we will miss the annual target, with the only question now being by how much,” said the private sector group. …Last year, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) submitted an assessment to the Government that highlighted that Ireland will need to plant far more than the 8,000 ha per year to meet its climate action commitments. …The EPA’s suggestions also stressed that Ireland’s policy position of carbon neutrality by 2050 will depend on the forest sector acting as a carbon sink to offset residual emissions.

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Nanoplastics found to interfere with tree photosynthesis

Swiss Info
August 29, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Tiny plastic particles reach the leaves and needles of trees via the roots and disrupt photosynthesis, researchers at federal technology institute ETH Zurich have discovered. After absorbing plastic particles, the trees no longer used part of the sunlight’s energy for photosynthesis, but dissipated it as heat. This is a typical stress reaction of trees, wrote the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF). For their experiment, the researchers grew 200 young trees and added different concentrations of tiny plastic particles, known as nanoplastics, to the water. After just a few weeks, the researchers discovered one to two milligrams of nanoplastics per gram of plant material in the roots. In the trunk and in the leaves and needles, it was around ten to a hundred times less. Measurements showed that the effectiveness of photosynthesis in the torminalis trees fell by a third within two weeks and by a tenth in the spruce within four weeks. 

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