Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Moth walls and Artificial Intelligence leads to a clear call to action

Natural Resources Canada
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Moth populations are rapidly declining in many parts of the world. Joe Bowden, an entomologist with the Canadian Forest Service, is taking notice and urges others to do the same. While I was working in Denmark some years ago, I was introduced to light walls used to attract moths. Upon moving back to Canada a few years ago, I started to think there’s an opportunity here. …All it takes is a white surface and a light. The light attracts moths at night and they land on the white surface. Then people can take photos and share them online by uploading them to sites like iNaturalist.ca, which is a global community of naturalists. …Moths and other insects are like a canary in the coal mine when it comes to climate change. We now have moth walls in all Parks Canada locations in Atlantic Canada. 

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Negotiators reach nature deal at COP15 despite objections from African countries

Canadian Press in Prince George Citizen
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, International

Steven Guilbeault 

MONTREAL — Canada and nearly 200 other countries now have eight years to set aside almost one-third of their land and marine territories for conservation under a landmark new biodiversity deal reached in Montreal on Monday. Host nation China’s environment minister, Huang Runqiu, declared the deal to be done at around 3:30 a.m., prompting a standing ovation from participants at the COP15 summit. “This is a historic moment,” Huang said through a translator in Montreal, where the nature talks were held due to challenges resulting from COVID-19 restrictions in China. Canada’s environment minister, Steven Guilbeault, called it “a bold step forward to protect nature, to protect the air that we breathe, the water that we drink.” …The negotiations were hampered by an impasse between developed nations, who were insisting on the 30 by 30 target, and developing nations who accused wealthier countries of setting high ambition without offering enough cash to help pay for it.

Additional coverage:

COP15 statement from Canada’s Minister of Environment and Climate Change – Environment and Climate Change Canada

Climate Proof Canada applauds adoption of Kunming-Montreal Global Diversity Framework – by Climate Proof Canada

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More than 190 countries sign landmark agreement to halt the biodiversity crisis

By Laura Paddison
CNN
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, International

More than 190 countries have adopted a sweeping agreement to protect nature at the United Nations’ biodiversity conference in Montreal. The agreement includes 22 targets aimed at halting the biodiversity crisis, including a pledge to protect 30% of land and oceans by 2030. Only 17% of land and 10% of oceans are currently considered protected. Campaigners have hailed it as a “major milestone” for conserving complex, fragile ecosystems on which everyone depends. But some countries were unhappy, criticizing the agreement for not going far enough. The Democratic Republic of Congo has said it cannot support the agreement. …The framework also includes an agreement to reform $500 billion of subsidies that are harmful to nature, and to increase biodiversity financing to developing countries. …The agreement has been criticized for lacking quantifiable pledges around reducing production and consumption, which are key drivers of biodiversity loss. The agreement is not legally binding. …The next biodiversity summit will take place in 2024.

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COP15: Nations reach ‘historic’ deal to protect nature

By Helen Briggs
BBC News
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States, International

Nations have agreed to protect a third of the planet for nature by 2030 in a landmark deal aimed at safeguarding biodiversity.
There will also be targets for protecting vital ecosystems such as rainforests and wetlands and the rights of indigenous peoples. …The main points include:

  • Maintaining, enhancing and restoring ecosystems, including halting species extinction and maintaining genetic diversity
  • “Sustainable use” of biodiversity – essentially ensuring that species and habitats can provide the services they provide for humanity, such as food and clean water
  • Ensuring that the benefits of resources from nature, like medicines that come from plants, are shared fairly and equally and that indigenous peoples’ rights are protected
  • Paying for and putting resources into biodiversity: Ensuring that money and conservation efforts get to where they are needed 

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Timber management should include ecoforestry philosophy

By Bernard Juurlink
The Times Colonist
December 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In 1937, Ernest C. Manning, B.C.’s chief forester, told the Vancouver Board of Trade that “our forest resources are our real central bank. … Keep the assets in a productive state and do not dissipate the capital.” In 1939, in his annual report to the legislature, Manning said: “We are turning capital into revenue. We are creating barren lands.” Despite this warning, B.C. continued to maintain unsustainable forestry practices, resulting in much of B.C.’s “capital” being turned into revenue. Most of our iconic high-value old-growth forests are gone. The recent letter “North Cowichan could sell its forests” supported management of our forests that would include spraying forests with glyphosate to kill deciduous trees… [and] replace naturally regenerated mixed forests with monoculture plantation forests. …We need to “manage” our forests using ecoforestry approaches. A good example of this is the Wildwood Ecoforest at Yellowpoint.

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Forest Enhancement Society Newsletter

Forest Enhancement Society of BC
December 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

FESBC Board Directors Wayne Clogg and Jim Snetsinger recently completed their six-year terms, and are therefore stepping down from FESBC. Each has served as Chair of the FESBC Board, significantly contributing to the success of FESBC since its inception in 2016. In the early days, it was daunting to lead a start-up funding entity from scratch, but they brought instant credibility to FESBC by virtue of their previous backgrounds as Vice President of a major forest products company and Chief Forester for the Province of B.C. FESBC welcomes some new additions to the Board of Directors. They bring important experiences and perspectives that will help shape the future of FESBC. In this newsletter: Learn about 12 new FESBC-funded projects; changes on the FESBC Board, how FESBC funding for community forests across B.C., is helping them in wildfire mitigation efforts, and Meet our Faces of Forestry featured person, Dan Macmaster.

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Scourge of mountain pine beetle continues to drop after series of cold Alberta winters

By Scott Hayes
Vancouver Sun
December 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Parks Canada says mountain pine beetle populations have practically bottomed out in Jasper National Park. The most recent population survey shows that their numbers have dropped 94 per cent since their most recent peak in 2019. The survey also shows a sharp decline in trees killed by mountain pine beetle for the fourth consecutive year. Dave Argument, resource conservation manager with Parks Canada, said that he expected to see a continued decline in the mountain pine beetle. “This year’s survey results are not a surprise to us. They’re confirmation of the good news story that we’ve been seeing.” It was a cold snap of the winter of 2019 that really started to significantly bring down the population of mountain pine beetles. Parks Canada has been conducting two surveys on the situation every year. …That survey also aids in mapping out the total area impacted by the mountain pine beetle.

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Does North Cowichan want 500-plus loaded logging trucks on its streets?

By Larry Pynn, Maple Bay, BC
Chemainus Valley Courier
December 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Larry Pynn

As the citizens of North Cowichan consider the future of the municipal forest reserve, they are being asked to choose among four management scenarios. That can be challenging given that the amount of logging in each scenario is being expressed in cubic metres of timber. So, let’s talk in terms of logging trucks. The municipality says that one logging truck operating in the forest reserve hauls from 30 to 35 cubic metres of timber. So, let’s assume an average of 32.5 cubic metres per truckload. Now, let’s see what that looks like for each of the four scenarios presented by the UBC Partnership Group, keeping in mind that these are annual figures: (1) Status Quo: 17,500 cubic metres = 538 logging trucks; (2) Reduced Harvest: 7,400 cubic metres = 227 logging trucks; (3) Active Conservation: 1,300 cubic metres = 40 logging trucks; and (4) Passive Conservation: No logging; no trucks.

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A Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society poll reveals Albertans want to see more protected lands

By Troy Bannerman
The Lethbridge Herald
December 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society recently released the results of a poll to gauge Albertan’s level of activity in parks and conservation areas. Key results show most Albertans support setting aside more land in Alberta to protect wildlife habitat to prevent further decline of wildlife populations (77%), more land in Alberta to be left as wilderness where human activities are minimal (76%), and more land for provincial parks with a focus on recreation and leisure (73%). The poll also revealed many Albertans are opposed to the current provincial government’s plans for conserved and protected lands. “One of the things with the timing of the poll is that we got the results, essentially just as this government, and this new Premier was organizing her cabinet; including splitting what was the Department of Environment and Parks into two ministries,” said Katie Morrison, of CPAWS Southern Alberta.

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B.C. judge denies Save Old Growth protester conditional discharge

By Bob Mackin
Business in Vancouver
December 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In Provincial Court Wednesday, Judge Nancy Adams fined Vancouver teacher Deborah Sherry Janet Tin Tun $1,000 and sentenced her to 18 months probation after she pleaded guilty to mischief for gluing her hand to pavement April 4 on the Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Bridge in an illegal Save Old Growth blockade. Tin Tun … had sought a conditional discharge… …“She really hasn’t acknowledged that she’s caused any disruption in people’s lives. She has placed herself on a higher platform, she thinks she’s for a higher calling,” Adams said. “She feels, in my view, entitled.” …Adams cited [a protest news story] which mentioned that Tin Tun and another protester “don’t enjoy being arrested, but the disruptions seem to be the only things that get the government to act.” “[Conditional discharge] would enable those who have her view that committing a crime is now the appropriate action when government isn’t moving fast enough,” Adams said.

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Christmas tree seller illegally harvested trees intended for Manitoba forestry renewal

CBC News
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

MANITOBA — A man has been charged with illegally cutting down spruce trees from a Manitoba government plantation, then selling them as Christmas trees at a business in Steinbach. …On Dec. 13, they saw a man hauling trees out of the plantation on Crown land north of Marchand. The plantation is a valuable test area that grows high-quality trees for use in forestry renewal projects across southern Manitoba, said a news release from Manitoba Natural Resources and Northern Development. …In all, the man is accused of cutting 167 trees. The majority of them were six to nine metres (20 to 30 feet) tall, but just a shorter section of the top had been removed from each of them. …The trees have been donated to the Ukrainian church in Winnipeg. If convicted, faces a fine of up to $200,000, up to six months in jail or both.

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Bridge deficiencies revealed in Mackenzie forest audit

By Ted Clarke
Prince George Citizen
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

An audit of forestry activities conducted in the Mackenzie region by Canadian Forest Products Ltd., released on Tuesday reveals Canfor did not live up its obligations on bridge construction and maintenance.  The Forest Practices Board study found one bridge was improperly built and 11 others had structural deficiencies the company failed to address. The public has access to all of the bridges identified as being deficient, according to guidelines contained Forest and Range Practices Act and the Wildfire Act. …“Since the audit, Canfor has responded to these findings in a positive and timely manner by rebuilding the first bridge according to the plans, completing bridge inspections and removing four of the bridges with deficiencies,” Larson said. “Canfor is working to address the remaining bridges with the Ministry of Forests and local communities that depend on these roads and bridges for access.”

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Audit of Canfor in Mackenzie finds bridge issues

BC Forest Practices Board
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA – An audit of Canadian Forest Products Ltd.’s (Canfor) forest licence A15384 in the Mackenzie Natural Resource District found Canfor’s forestry activities complied with the Forest and Range Practices Act and the Wildfire Act, except for bridge construction and maintenance. One bridge was not properly built and 11 other bridges had apparent structural deficiencies that were not addressed. All of these bridges were on roads accessible to the public. “The newly constructed bridge did not follow the plans prepared by a professional engineer and was not safe for industrial use. The legislation also requires licensees to maintain bridges, and, if they find structural deficiencies, the bridges must be repaired, closed to users or have signs posted to limit the weight of vehicles permitted to cross the bridge. Canfor did not follow these requirements,” said Bruce Larson, acting chair, Forest Practices Board.

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Forest Practices Board Investigation Examines Enforcement of the Wildfire Act

BC Forest Practices Board
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

VICTORIA – A new investigation report released looks at how well government is investigating, deciding compliance and recovering costs from those responsible for causing wildfires in B.C.The investigation found government has a well-defined and consistent process. Most decisions are appropriate, but there are some opportunities for improvement. Approximately half of all wildfires in B.C. are caused by people, and in the past decade, government has spent approximately $2.7 billion on wildfire suppression. Government has the ability to recover costs related to human-caused wildfires. If government suspects that a person or company has caused a wildfire or contravened the Wildfire Act, it conducts an investigation, offers a hearing and determines whether they were responsible. This is called a determination. If they are found responsible, government may levy penalties, recover costs and order remediation.

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Mosaic Announces Support For Vancouver Island University’s Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas Planning Advanced Certificate

Mosaic Forest Management
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Nanaimo, BC — Mosaic Forest Management is proud to announce a $50,000 contribution to support First Nations students in the Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas (IPCA) Planning Advanced Certificate at Vancouver Island University (VIU). VIU welcomed their first cohort of students into the IPCA program in 2022. The IPCA program is a comprehensive program relating to protecting and conserving the lands and waters across Canada. Students who graduate from this program will have advanced knowledge of the meaning and purpose of IPCAs and will be able to distinguish between western land use planning and regulatory approaches and Indigenous practices and world views. The Mosaic-sponsored awards are merit-based, research-focused, and of interest to those involved in land use planning, parks, environmental protection, and conservation or other areas relating to culture, lands, waters, air, and wildlife.

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Sawmillers a tale of love, sabotage and life at the mill

By Patrick Davies
100 Mile Free Press
December 17, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

When you work in a B.C. sawmill, you are bound to meet a few colourful characters. Barry Porter has met his fair share of most while employed for 30 years at a Canfor sawmill in Chetwynd. That experience is the basis for his debut novel, Sawmillers. “After all those many years in the sawmill, you meet a lot of interesting people and see a lot of interesting things happen. Some are shocking, some are tragic but there’s a lot of humour so I decided to write a fictional novel about it,” said Porter, who now lives in 108 Mile Ranch. “I wanted to tell a story about the kind of people you might work with.” …Sawmillers follows Rob, a young millwright apprentice, on his first week on the job. Most of the book takes place in the Peace River area but Porter also included a few chapters set in 100 Mile House when Rob visits his parents. Available on Amazon.

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Supporting Indigenous economic reconciliation through partnerships

By Harold Reimer, Finning Canada
Canadian Forest Industries / Wood Business
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Harold Reimer

As British Columbia starts to move away from traditional governance to one of reconciliation, B.C. First Nations will play a key role in the industry’s future. Recent changes to government legislation and policies in the forestry sector will increase tenure for First Nations communities, allowing greater opportunity to experience economic benefits that come from resources being harvested on traditional and territorial Indigenous land. …Collaborative initiatives and partnerships between First Nations and industry are already creating new jobs and opportunities, but more can be done. Building relationships through reconciliation, rather than governance, is key. …Equipment and technology dealers can offer support through purchase and lease arrangements – structuring deals to ensure a better process is followed and crucial after sales support is provided. …Here are some steps the forestry sector can take to help support the communities in which they operate. 

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Complete municipal forest survey to resume logging

Letter by Robert Beard, director, BC Forest Discovery Centre
Cowichan Valley Citizen
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The private lands that make up the Municipal Forest Reserve were initially logged in the early part of the last century. The municipality acquired these lands for the non payment of municipal taxes in the depression years of the late 1920s and the 1930s. …In the 1960s the lands were put under a regime of sustained yield forest management and timber harvesting. In the early 1980s a forestry advisory committee, made up of professional foresters and lay people, was established to guide the management of these forest lands. The result is our Municipal Forest Reserve… Unfortunately there is now a very active group opposed to harvesting on … the Forest Reserve lands. The “Where do we stand” group and supporters are very actively campaigning against timber harvesting. If you support continuing the sustained yield management of the municipal forest lands and the sustained long term harvesting of timber, please complete the survey.

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North Cowichan leads the way on community forestry

Letter by Rob Fullerton, co-manager of WhereDoWeStand.ca
Cowichan Valley Citizen
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The public consultation into the Municipal Forest Reserve has generated considerable debate in the local paper and social media. Healthy discussion is good. But it’s also important at this critical time that people have factual information upon which to base their opinions. Note that the public came out in full force to attend the forest review online workshops and the open house at the Maple Bay Fire Hall. …All four forest management scenarios were treated fairly and the participants were free to express our opinions. The public discussion has shifted from a logging vs. no-logging debate to a much more nuanced discussion of ecology and modern forestry management practices. …Our professional forester Shaun Mason RFP and the UBC Forestry partnership also receive credit for working together and showing a willingness to explore all available forest management options. …If you haven’t filled out the North Cowichan Community Forest Management Survey you can find it online here.

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Dependence on forestry a mistake

Letter by Peter W. Rusland, North Cowichan
Cowichan Valley Citizen
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Dear Mayor Rob Douglas and council: While applauding council’s wisely supportive role in talks about tragic job losses — and potential tax shortfalls — at Catalyst’s Crofton mill, this dire situation (Cowichan Valley Citizen Dec. 15, 2022) points, in part, to our dismal failure to diversify North Cowichan’s forest-based economy. Forestry’s fickle fortunes could also reduce work at local Western Forest Products’ operations, council has learned. In short, struggling taxpayers may face hefty tax hikes as many of our economic eggs sit in the basket of a mill owned by market-driven Paper Excellence. …Much of this dark forecast should have been tackled by council and Economic Development Cowichan decades ago. Foresight and planning were sorely lacking to direct diversification away from forestry alone, and into value-added industries, manufacturing, eco-tourism, and other sunrise economic developments.

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North Cowichan Municipal Forest Reserve Review and Survey

Connect North Cowichan
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

North Cowichan is reviewing its forest reserve management practices, with the intent to develop options for a future management plan. Help shape the future of the management of the Municipal Forest Reserve (MFR) by participating in opportunities presented through this process. During Round 2 (Fall 2022), you will be asked to consider four potential forest management scenarios and help determine a preferred option. These scenarios were developed by the UBC Partnership Group (UBC, 3GreenTree Consulting) that considered input on values heard during Round 1 in Fall 2021. The scenarios reflect ecological, economic, and social criteria and indicators, and represent a spectrum of timber harvesting and carbon credit revenue options. Take the survey: An online survey is open until December 31, 2022. 

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Canadian Institute of Forestry creating centralized hub for urban forestry data Social Sharing

CBC News
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Mark Pearson

The Canadian Institute of Forestry wants to make it easier for people to access and compare urban forestry data from across the country. The institute, which is based in Mattawa, recently received funding from Natural Resources Canada for its Open Urban Forests project. The project will gather open-source geospacial forest data from municipalities across Canada, and compile that data in a centralized hub on the institute’s website. The data will provide information on details like tree cover, number of trees planted, carbon storage, and long-term trends in urban forestry.  “By ensuring that urban forestry geospatial data is more accessible, we are making it easier for communities across Canada to expand urban forests,” said Jonathan Wilkinson, minister of natural resources. The institute’s executive director, Mark Pearson, said the institute aims to have the centralized data hub up and running by March 2024. 

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US Private Landowners and Family-Owned Forests Can Now Be Certified by SCS Global Services

By SCS Global Services
Accesswire
December 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

EMERYVILLE, California — SCS Global Services (SCS), the US third-party certifier of forestry management claims since 1991, announced that it is now accredited by the ANSI National Accreditation Board to offer certification to the American Tree Farm System Standard (ATFS). ATFS certification enables family-owned forests and private landowners in the US to demonstrate that their forest management practices conform to rigorous environmental standards. ATFS is endorsed by the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC), which enables supply chains and companies to receive recognition in international markets. ATFS certified woodlands are a principal source of fiber for chain-of-custody programs under PEFC internationally and the Sustainable Forestry Initiative® (SFI®) in the US and Canada. “We are excited to expand our existing portfolio of forestry certifications to include the American Tree Farm System,” said Maggie Schwartz, SCS’ Managing Director of Natural Resources.”

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Amazon, P&G Fall Short on Environmental Paper Goals, Group Says

By Daniela Sirtori-Cortina
BNN Bloomberg
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Companies from Procter & Gamble to Walmart are lagging in efforts to mitigate environmental impact from the paper products they make and sell, according to a new report from an advocacy group. Environment America assessed the progress of six companies on their use of virgin fibers and indirect greenhouse-gas emissions. The group also looked at whether they obtained consent from Indigenous communities. …Walmart was given an F because it doesn’t disclose how many products are made with 100% recycled fiber or other non-virgin wood. …The other three companies given a failing grade for similar reasons were Costco, Amazon and privately-held Georgia-Pacific. …P&G, which received a D, released a bamboo toilet paper product this year, which the advocacy group said is a “step in the right direction.” In a response to the report, Georgia-Pacific said it follows guidelines on forest protection and sustainable practices. 

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Quarantine aims to slow spread of emerald ash borer in Oregon

By George Plaven
The Capital Press
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

FOREST GROVE, Oregon — Oregon agriculture officials have adopted a temporary quarantine to slow the spread of emerald ash borer, a highly destructive forest pest that has killed hundreds of millions of native ash trees in North America. The quarantine limits the movement of ash, olive and white fringe tree material from Washington County, where the insect was found in late June in several ash trees at a middle school parking lot in Forest Grove, about 25 miles west of Portland. Native to Asia, the emerald ash borer first arrived in the U.S. in 2002, near Detroit, Mich. Since then, it has spread across 30 states and Canada. The discovery earlier this year in Oregon marked the first sighting on the West Coast. …So far, emerald ash borer has only been found in several ash trees in Forest Grove, according to the Oregon Department of Agriculture.

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New tree nursery set to be built in Siskiyou County to help wildfire damaged forests across California

By Brett Taylor
KDRV ABC Newswatch 12
December 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

GAZELLE, Calif.– A new tree nursery will soon be coming to Siskiyou County to help forests, damaged by wildfires, get back to what they used to be. The state-of-the-art 25-million seedling per-year tree nursery in Gazelle will begin construction next year, bringing 20 new greenhouses to the area and more than 50 by 2026 when construction is expected to be completed. It will also focus on the production of native conifer seedlings for forest restoration, research, and conservation projects. …Since 2018, CAL FIRE reports show that more than nine million acres have been damaged by wildfires across the state, with more than two million of those acres needing reforestation assistance. …The new tree nursery will also help bring 15 new jobs to the county, as well as other opportunities for work, including new research on seedling production. Once SPI has helped Californian forests, their hope is to extend their seedlings to other states, including Oregon.

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‘We got lucky’: inside California’s strangely quiet wildfire year

By Gabrielle Canon
The Guardian
December 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

In California, a state that’s grown accustomed to months of smoky skies, mass evacuations and the ever-present fear of wildfire, 2022 felt unusual. Summer came and went, the weather warmed and the hillsides yellowed across the state, while residents held their breath. But a giant blaze or siege of simultaneous infernos – the events that have defined recent fire seasons – failed to appear. By the time November rains brought relief to the drought-stricken landscape, slightly more than 360,000 acres had burned. That’s a strikingly low number, compared with the 2.2m that burned on average annually in California during the past five years, and only a fraction of the record 2020 season when more than 4.2m acres burned. …But even with smaller numbers, the state wasn’t spared. Fires may have been comparatively smaller than previous years, but some still burned fiercely, leaving devastation in their wake. 

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Conservation group sues U.S. Forest Service over Twisp Restoration Project

By March Stamper
Methow Valley News
December 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

The North Cascades Conservation Council (NCCC) has filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Forest Service over the Twisp Restoration Project (TRP), alleging that the Forest Service failed to give the public adequate opportunity to comment…. The lawsuit also contends that the agency didn’t consider multiple alternatives, and analyze all potential impacts of the TRP in violation of federal laws. It also contends that the TRP uses a management approach that “allows logging contractors to remove trees at will under vague guidelines.” Although the Forest Service held an initial comment period on the TRP in 2020, the agency significantly changed the project after much of the area burned in the 2021 Cedar Creek Fire. After the fire, the Forest Service reduced the TRP area by 69% to exclude areas affected by the fire. But they didn’t allow the public to weigh in on the potential impacts of the revised TRP, according to the lawsuit.

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Federal budget proposal would add $1.45 billion for New Mexico wildfire recovery

By Scott Wyland
The Santa Fe New Mexican
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Those who suffered losses from the largest wildfire in the state’s recorded history could see nearly $1.5 billion in additional federal aid if the funding request New Mexico’s congressional delegates added to the federal omnibus spending package passes this week. The money would bump recovery funds for the Hermits Peak/Calf Canyon Fire to almost $4 billion, and roughly $140 million of it would be earmarked to help Las Vegas, N.M., repair and overhaul its water treatment system, which was damaged in the fire’s aftermath. The $2.5 billion in earlier assistance, co-sponsored by U.S. Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández and Sen. Ben Ray Luján, both Democrats, also came through a stopgap spending measure, although the one in September was much smaller than the $1.7 trillion omnibus meant to fund the federal government through most of 2023 headed to a vote this week. The aid covers damage caused by the blaze and post-fire flooding.

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A record high number of dead trees are found as Oregon copes with an extreme drought

By Juliana Kim
National Public Radio
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Flying over Oregon’s woodlands, tree health specialist Danny DePinte was stunned by what he saw: a stretch of dead fir that seemed to go on and on.  “As we continued to fly along, it just kept going. It didn’t stop for miles and miles,” DePinte, who conducts research in the Pacific Northwest region for the U.S. Forest Service, told NPR.  Since 1947, the U.S. has been conducting annual aerial surveys across the country to monitor the health of trees. Flying up to 2,000 feet in the air, observers scan terrain in a grid-like pattern, analyzing about 30 acres per second, DePinte said. With a tablet, a pen and a trained eye, they are able to spot and diagnose unhealthy trees based on their color, posture and fullness.  …Preliminary figures indicate that 1.1 million acres showed fir trees with some signs of dying — almost double the previous all-time high for the state since the survey began 75 years ago. 

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Through the prism of a U.S. forester

By Michele Nelson
The Payson Roundup
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Jerry Nicholls, timber contracting officer (trainee) for the Tonto National Forest forestry department, studied a patch of trees through a No. 10BAF (Basal Area Factor) prism — counting on how the prism bends the light to determine how much basal area was present to then remove the prescribed amount. Basal Area is a common way for foresters to describe tree stand density. …This process is called horizontal point sampling and foresters use the prism and calculations to determine the number of trees to be removed, based on the silviculturalist prescription. That prescription “could favor leaving larger healthier trees, (or have) a preference on species, such as ponderosa pine versus Douglas fir, for their health, or a preference” for a certain size of tree because that is missing from the mix of tree sizes. …He explained that the Basal Area Factor will change based on the prism size a forester picks, either a five, eight, or 10.

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Oregon’s Elliott research forest will be North America’s largest

By David Steves & Cassandra Profita
Oregon Public Broadcasting
December 14, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Oregon is on its way to creating North America’s largest research forest, following Tuesday’s decision by top state officials to separate the Elliott State Forest in southwest Oregon from its obligation to fund schools and designate the land as a place for scientific discovery.  The State Land Board voted unanimously Tuesday to create the 80,000-acre Elliott State Research Forest, signaling an end to a years-long debate over how to manage a state forest in southwest Oregon that was failing to generate revenue for public education. …The Elliott provides habitat to dwindling wildlife populations, including salmon, the northern spotted owl and the marbled murrelet. Oregon political leaders have been struggling for decades to find a way for the forest to comply with wildlife protection requirements while continuing to meet a legal obligation to generate revenue for public schools.

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Reject East Crazy Mountains land swap proposal

By Park County Rod and Gun Club et al
The Billings Gazette
December 18, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

MONTANA — The U.S. Forest Service is trying to pull a fast one on the public by putting forward a significant proposal that would negatively impact our public lands, public access and public opportunities. All the while private interests would get exactly what they want. The USFS recently put forth the proposed “East Crazy Inspiration Divide Land Exchange.” The proposal is complex and convoluted, intertwining what should be a simple land exchange in the Yellowstone Club’s Big Sky-area property with a very complex land exchange in the east Crazy Mountains. Turns out, the Custer-Gallatin National Forest refused to entertain a land exchange involving the Yellowstone Club property unless the Yellowstone Club used the weight of its money to “solve public access” in the Crazies. Now we have two very different, otherwise unrelated land exchanges, and the public must choose to reject both or accept both with no alternatives offered.

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Grants available for projects that promote sustainable community forests

By Texas A&M Forest Service
The Gilmer Mirror
December 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

COLLEGE STATION — Texas A&M Forest Service is soliciting applications for a pair of $50,000 grants to promote healthy trees and forests. The agency’s Community Forestry Grants Program seeks to fund community forestry-focused projects in two areas: climate resiliency and community equity. To be eligible, applicants must be public or non-profit organizations and can include state and local government agencies, educational institutions, non-government organizations and public utility districts. Individuals, businesses and federal agencies are not eligible. Proposals that complement existing initiatives that address issues facing community forests in Texas are encouraged. The deadline to apply is Feb. 15. Organizations can apply for both grants, but only one will be awarded per entity. Gretchen Riley, Texas A&M Forest Service Forest Systems Department Head, said the scope of the proposals can be varied and far-reaching. 

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Disappearing flying squirrel lacks places to perch

By Carol Hillestad
The Pike County Courier
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

As a way of getting around, flying has a lot to offer. …Only three kinds of creatures that exist in the modern world have evolved as true flyers: birds, insects, and bats. But the benefits of flight are huge, and dozens of living things have evolved ways to get some of those advantages for themselves.  …With its big dark eyes and round ears, our own Northern flying squirrel (Glaucomys sabrinus macrotis) is about the cutest of such “flying” animals. …Once a common sight in the northern tier of Pennsylvania, the Northern flying squirrel is now endangered in our state (although it is secure nationally). A detailed survey from 2003 – 2007 found only 33 individuals, all but two of them in the Poconos.Habitat destruction is the culprit.The rich old-growth hemlock and spruce forests that once swept across Pennsylvania have been lost to development, or reduced to small fragments. 

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Illegal tree felling in England to be punishable with jail and uncapped fines

By Mark Tovey
The Guardian
December 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Illegal tree felling in England will be punishable by unlimited fines and prison sentences from 1 January, the government has announced. The current fine for cutting down a tree without a licence, established by the Forestry Act 1967, is £2,500 or twice the value of the timber, whichever is the higher. But the development value of the land, as opposed to the price of timber, has been the main driver of illegal felling in recent years. To deter property barons from illegally flattening trees and accepting the paltry penalties as a cost of doing business, the Forestry Act 1967 will be amended to allow uncapped fines. …“These new powers will hit people where it hurts – in their wallets,” said the Forestry Commission’s chief executive, Richard Stanford. “ …Abi Bunker, at the Woodland Trust, said: “This should strengthen protection for trees in England.”

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Labor facing test of green credentials in fight over native logging

By Mike Foley
Sydney Morning Herald
December 20, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

David Pocock

A political clash over native forest logging is looming for the federal government following its commitment to an international treaty to boost protections for nature, with key crossbench senators declaring Australia must now end the union-backed industry. Federal Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek represented Australia at a United Nations environment summit in Montreal, where 196 countries committed to protect 30 per cent of the world’s land and water – in line with Australia’s existing policy – to safeguard biodiversity and halt extinctions of wildlife by 2050. Greens Senator Sarah Hanson Young and independent Senator David Pocock both welcomed Australia’s commitment to the deal, but singled out native forest logging as a key environmental threat that must be addressed if Australia is to hold up its end of the global agreement. Logging is a key risk to the survival of endangered species such as koalas, greater gliders and Leadbeater’s possum.

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Canadian firefighters support Bathurst’s forestry bushfire season

By Forestry Corporation of New South Wales
Australian Rural & Regional News
December 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Ty Davis and Brandon Allen

Forestry Corporation of New South Wales has welcomed five international recruits to its 2022 Bathurst seasonal program, with firefighters coming from Canada and New Zealand to join local recruits and support the organisation leading into bushfire season. Canada is particularly well represented, with four recruits making the 17 hour flight to Australia to join the team this year. The two countries share many similarities, however there have been a few hurdles to overcome, reports new Canadian recruit Ty Davis. “Aussie slang is definitely a thing and it’s taken a little while to decode,” Mr Davis jokes. …During the Canadian summer Davis works with Alberta Wildfire on a seven month contract, allowing him the chance to travel to Australia and work in Forestry Corporation’s seasonal program in their winter. …Fellow Canadian Krista Lagasse also travelled to join Forestry Corporation’s seasonal program…

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Illegal firewood collecting in Tasmania not only an eyesore but potentially fatal

By Adam Holmes
ABC News, Australia
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Across Tasmania, the illegal collection of firewood in native forests is common throughout the year — but the state’s public forestry company says it has become “rampant”, putting safety at risk and creating a black market.  In Tasmania the practice of illegally taking timber is sometimes referred to as “wood hooking”.  Safety concerns about wood hooking were again brought to the fore with the death of a seven-year-old boy at Mt Lloyd in the Derwent Valley in 2015, when his mother’s partner was cutting wood resulting in a falling branch crushing their ute.  Despite the tragedy, wood hooking in native forest areas continues apace.  In the nearby Plenty Valley, evidence of the practice is widespread.  …Tasmania has Australia’s highest per capita consumption of firewood, and research by the University of Tasmania has found a significant majority of consumers are aware that wood is usually sourced illegally.

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Lula’s Climate Actions Must Match His Rhetoric

Bloomberg in the Washington Post
December 19, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

“There is no climate security for the world without a protected Amazon,” Brazil’s president-elect, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, said in Egypt last month. He’s right: Limiting global warming requires saving the planet’s largest rainforest, which shriveled under outgoing president Jair Bolsonaro. To reverse the damage, Lula needs the world’s help — and must convince more Brazilians that fighting climate change is in their interest too. In terms of planetary health, Bolsonaro’s tenure was disastrous. …As a candidate, Lula blasted Bolsonaro’s environmental record for harming Brazil’s image. He’s promised to host a summit of Amazon rainforest nations … like Indonesia and the Democratic Republic of Congo, which also have large tropical forests, hoping to secure more generous international assistance for conservation efforts. …Lula said, “I didn’t come back to do what I did already. I came back to do more.” Strong words. What the planet needs now is action.

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