Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

SFI celebrates a growing network, conservation, and education

Sustainable Forestry Initiative
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, United States

The Fall SFI Newsletter features:

  • SFI Welcomes Two New Directors with Incredible Sustainability Experience 
  • Indigenous Rights And Relationship Building Eunits
  • SFI Participates In Inaugural Women’s Forest Congress
  • SFI Announces Lauren T. Cooper As Its New Chief Conservation Officer
  • SFI Highlights Urban & Community Forest Sustainability Standard
  • Wayfair Lists SFI As Source Of Sustainable Wood
  • SFI Recognizes Truth And Reconciliation Week
  • SFI Certified Forests Play Key Role In Gopher Tortoise Conservation
  • SFI Sponsors Tree Planting At Sustainable Brands Conference

 

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BC Community Forest Association November Newsletter

The BC Community Forest Association
November 24, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Community Forest Association has released their fall newsletter is out. Here are some of the headlines:

  • Announcing the BCCFA 2022-2023 Board of Directors
  • Conference Reporting – session summaries and photos
  • Presenting our 20th Anniversary Video
  • Local media reports on the 2022 Nakusp Conference 
  • 2022 Community Forest Indicators Report 
  • BCCFA member communities news
  • Important Announcements and Meeting Notes

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United front needed for watershed protection

Letter by Tom Prior
Nelson Star
November 24, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The 170-page scientific watershed report: Preliminary Nature-directed Stewardship Plans, commissioned for Glade and Laird creek residents worried about industrial logging by Interior Health, ATCO and Kalesnikoff in their source of drinking water, was a make-work project for worthy local consultants.  In the last 30-plus years there have been at least four or five such watershed reports. There have also been a number of failed legal challenges by local watershed societies in the West and East Kootenays.  It has been made abundantly clear in B.C. courts that your government and timber corporation’s right to road and extract timber trump citizens rights to protect their source of drinking water, period. …Local watershed groups have not been able to organize a common front to protect their water.

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Retired Forester Blasts Professional Association in Resignation Letter

By Amanda Follett Hosgood
The Tyee
November 25, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Herb Hammond

Herb Hammond, a retired forester … is leaving the industry’s professional organization, citing an array of issues from lack of environmental stewardship to its cozy relationship with industry. He resigned from the Association of BC Forest Professionals in a 2,000-word letter, saying he could no longer remain silent on the “degradation and frequent destruction of natural forest[s]” as a result of forestry activities. …In the letter, posted on The Evergreen Alliance website, Hammond outlined in detail the ways he believes the organization has contributed to the “many endemic problems that plague the profession.” …In an email statement, ABCFP CEO Christine Gelowitz, RPF, said Hammond’s letter “demonstrates a misunderstanding” of ABCFP’s mandate, misconstruing it with the role of government. …But Hammond made it clear he doesn’t believe the organization is acting in the public interest. …He criticized the association’s refusal to allow retired forest professionals to advise on industry practices.

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Whitebark Pine Ecosystem Foundation is hiring, notes from the field & dendrochronology art

White Bark Pine Ecosystem Foundation
November 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Since the launch of the Fall Membership Drive, over 15% of our membership base has either joined or renewed during that time. We are truly thankful for a growing number of new members and donors who are joining our annual supporters. It is inspiring how this grassroots organization rallies together to advocate for and support the restoration of whitebark pine and other high-five pine ecosystems. Our community also contributes so much in time to raise awareness of these conservation issues by giving talks, leading hikes and sharing the latest news. Highlights of our newsletter include:

  • Whitebark Pine Restoration Underway at Brundage Mountain Resort
  • Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes Forestry Highlighted by The Pew Charitable Trusts
  • Hornet’s Nest Test Plantation on the Flathead National Forest
  • Aerial Surveys of Whitebark Pine in British Columbia
  • Dendrochronology Art by Tree Ring Works
  • Webinar: Working Together to Recover Whitebark and Limber Pine in the Canadian Rockies

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Watershed security ‘what we heard’ report available online

By Ministry of Land, Water and Resource Stewardship
Government of British Columbia
November 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbians’ feedback about the watershed security strategy and fund being developed in partnership between the Province and Indigenous Peoples is now available. In January 2022, British Columbians were asked to comment on a discussion paper about the strategy and that feedback is online in a “what we heard” report. This report is the latest step in the ongoing development of the strategy, which will help guide enhanced management and protection of B.C.’s water resources and watersheds through collaboration with First Nations, local communities and individual British Columbians. Maintaining healthy watersheds is vital to ensure that good-quality water is available to support ecosystems, economies, cultures and communities throughout British Columbia. Healthy watersheds are also important for reducing the risks and effects of floods, droughts and wildfires, and for increasing protection against such events in a changing climate. …The next steps include the release of an intentions paper,  informed by the public…

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Wildfire Fuel Treatment project underway on Cortes Island

By Marc Kitteringham
Campbell River Mirror
November 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Strathcona Regional District is getting Cortes Island ready for next year’s wildfire season by clearing flammable brush from near the island’s recycling centre. The process is called Wildfire Fuel Treatment, and involves modifying the forest to reduce the amount of fuel available to burn. This can include thinning trees, pruning branches, removing brush and other practices. The goal is to manage the amount of fuel, which would then reduce the potential for loss of life, property and infrastructure. “The SRD was successful in obtaining $70,000 in grant funding through the Community Resiliency Investment (CRI) Firesmart Economic Recovery grant to fully fund this wildfire mitigation work across four hectares,” said SRD Chair Mark Baker. The first stages of the project were to under go a traditional use survey and field reconnaissance with the Tla’amin First Nation.

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Restoration of a Shay Locomotive

By Nauticapedia
YouTube
November 14, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Forest Discovery Centre in Duncan BC Canada has one of the very few extant Shay locomotives. They are concluding a six-year restoration project that will see it operating again in 2023. This steam locomotive is a beautiful piece of engineering and technology as well as a vital link to the lumber industry history of Vancouver Island. It will also begin operating passenger trains to carry visitors to the popular heritage site – an attraction that pleases the whole family. Alf Carter, President of the Forest Discovery Centre tells the story of the restoration as we catch views of the engine. Additional videos include: Steam Donkey Collection and Forest Discovery Centre, Duncan British Columbia

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Preparing for the Arrival of the Mountain Pine Beetle

By Faculty of Public Affairs
Carleton University
November 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Much as coastal communities board up windows and pile sandbags in preparation for a hurricane, Canadian lumber towns are girding themselves for their own natural disaster — the Mountain Pine Beetle. This wood-boring insect devastated more than 50% of BC’s commercial pine trees in the early 2000s and is moving east, threatening Canada’s boreal forests. Prof. Stephan Schott and his colleagues are one step ahead of that infestation, enabling communities in Alberta and Saskatchewan to learn from those in BC, where it all started. …Schott’s team is spending time in Quesnel, a town known as the epicentre of the outbreak. …They will assess what worked and bring it to communities in Alberta and Saskatchewan that are in the midst of an outbreak or anticipating its arrival. “If it goes through Saskatchewan and reaches the boreal forest, it could destroy the northern pines through the rest of Canada,” says Schott.

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‘I did not want to be involved’: Police officer quits task force over concerns about RCMP tactics at Fairy Creek

By Rochelle Baker and Jennifer Osborne
National Observer
November 24, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

At least one police officer joined protesters, journalists and politicians raising alarm bells over RCMP enforcement tactics during the peak of conflict at the Fairy Creek old-growth blockades in B.C. during the summer of 2021. The officer, a former member of the RCMP’s specialized team that deals with resource extraction protests, resigned from the task force over concerns about “unjustifiable” police behaviour during an August crackdown on activists, a freedom-of-information (FOI) request shows. The resignation from the RCMP’s controversial Community-Industry Response Group came in an email dated Sept. 5, 2021, after the officer, with 13 years of experience, was sent to the long-running protest in the Port Renfrew area on southeastern Vancouver Island. The officer, whose name was redacted, remains a member of the RCMP, according to FOI documents obtained by freelance photographer Jen Osborne, who works with Canada’s National Observer. 

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Register Now for the ABCFP’s 75th Forestry Conference in Prince George

Association of BC Forest Professionals
November 24, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Reserve your spot now for the Association of BC Forest Professionals 75th Forestry Conference and AGM, February 8-10, 2023 at the Prince George Civic Centre. The conference offers in-person or virtual registration. Highlights include: 

  • After Three Years of Wildfires, What Have We Learned?, with Paul Hessburg, senior research ecologist, US Forest Service; Rob Ballinger, West Fraser Timber; and Lorraine Maclauchlan, entomologist, BC Ministry of Forests.
  • Forest Management: It’s More Than Timber, with BC Chief Forester Shane Berg, and Garry Merkel.
  • Climate Smart Forestry: Managing Forests for a Changing Climate, with Paul Hessburg, Senior Research Ecologist, US Forest Service; Vanessa Foord, Climatologist, BC Ministry of Forests; and Sheri Andrews-Key, Climate Vulnerability and Adaptation, Faculty of Forestry, UBC.
  • Indigenous Leadership and Co-managing BC’s Forests, with Lennard Joe, CEO, BC First Nations Forestry Council; Chief John French, Takla Lake First Nation; and Lori Ackerman, CEO, Blueberry River Resources Ltd.

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Woodlot Communicator Fall 2022 Newsletter

Federation of British Columbia Woodlot Associations
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The fall newsletter features:

  • Rooted in Learning – Woodlot Licence Conference, Abbotsford 
    The 2022 Annual Conference – Rooted In Learning – was hosted by the Fraser Valley Woodlot Association in Abbotsford October 14th-16th. Over 140 members, as well as forestry stakeholders, gathered for an information-packed weekend.
  • Minister’s Award for Excellence & Innovation in Woodlot Management
    Minister of Forests has recognized innovation and excellence in Woodlot Management
  • Woodlot Licence Program Report 2021
    BC’s Woodlot Licence program report takes a look at what sets the ‘Woodlot Licence’ apart from other forest tenures in BC.

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The sixth mass extinction event

Letter by Robert Hart, Terrace, BC
Terrace Standard
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Biologists tell us that we are entering the sixth mass extinction event since the world began, the first to be caused by a single species, us. According to a study this month, B.C. is home to the highest amount of biodiversity in Canada and accordingly, the greatest number of species at risk, 1900! The report’s sponsors, the Sierra Club and the Wilderness Committee, are calling for a new law that creates a framework to protect species, habitat and healthy ecosystems. …Presently, B.C.’s laws do not address all the threats that cause species to decline. The provincial government gave its Environment Ministry the mandate to create a species at risk law in 2017. It has yet to do that. The government accepted the Old Growth Strategic Review’s 2020 recommendation to “declare conservation of ecosystem health and biodiversity in our forests as an overarching priority.” But it has yet to enact required legislation there either. 

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Before and after photos of logging in BC’s old-growth forests

By Madigan Cotterhill
Canadian Geographic
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BRITISH COLUMBIA — In an effort to highlight the incredible grandeur of old-growth ecosystems and draw attention to their unfortunate destruction, Victoria-based conservation photographer TJ Watt has spent years seeking out and documenting the province’s biggest trees — then returning later to photograph their stumps. “I’m trying to remind people that unless we speak up and advocate for the permanent protection of old-growth ecosystems, we will continue losing ecosystems which are second only to the redwoods of California,” says Watt, who is the co-founder of and a campaigner with the Ancient Forest Alliance (AFA). In addition to advocating for the protection of existing old-growth forests, AFA wants to see replanted forests given more time to grow before being logged again.

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Biodiversity summit offers host country Canada a chance to step up

By David Suzuki
Pique News Magazine
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

COP15 (or NatureCOP) takes place Dec. 7 to 19 in Montreal. As a host country that is failing in many ways to protect and restore its vast, diverse ecosystems, Canada has a large role and responsibility. Delegates [will] try to finalize the Global Biodiversity Framework… It’s a huge and necessary goal, and Canada must get on board. That means stopping destructive practices like logging old-growth forests. Despite government assurances that it would “fundamentally transform the way we manage our old-growth forests, lands and resources,” it’s been especially bad here in British Columbia. …But with rampant gas fracking, oil exploitation, logging and mining and the infrastructure that comes with them, B.C. and Canada don’t appear remotely ready to realize the convention’s vision of “living in harmony with nature” any time soon. Short-sighted, outdated economics too often put continued fossil fuel and other industrial dollars ahead of the natural systems we rely on for health, well-being and survival.

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Minister Wilkinson Announces Support for Planting 9.3 Million New Trees in Interior B.C.

Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

CHILCOTIN, BC – …The Government of Canada is committed to supporting reforestation in British Columbia and across the country. Restoring forests will help sequester carbon to fight climate change while delivering clean air, supporting biodiversity and creating sustainable jobs. The Minister of Natural Resources, announced a contribution of over $10 million to Central Chilcotin Rehabilitation Ltd. through the 2 Billion Trees program, which aims to motivate and support new tree-planting projects. In partnership with the Forest Enhancement Society of British Columbia, Central Chilcotin Ltd is leading a large-scale tree-planting project in British Columbia – the Wildfire/Mountain Pine Beetle Reforestation and Habitat Restoration. The Wildfire/Mountain Pine Beetle Reforestation and Habitat Restoration project will plant a total of 9.3 million trees … within the traditional territory of Alexis Creek First Nation and the Tl’etinqox government. The goals are to sequester carbon, rebuild forest cover and restore habitat, as well as to provide local employment opportunities.

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Businesses join environmentalists to push B.C.’s premier to protect biodiversity

By Rochelle Baker, National Observer
The Vancouver Sun
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Businesses are urging the B.C. government to capitalize on Ottawa’s offer to spend hundreds of millions to save threatened ecosystems in the run-up to the UN Biodiversity Conference in Montreal. 250 businesses are backing a resolution urging Premier David Eby to back the federal government’s 30×30 promise — to protect 30 per cent of the country’s land and waters by 2030. Canada hopes to secure similar commitments from other global leaders at COP15…  The businesses are partnering with the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance and Nature Canada to push for permanent protections in the southern Interior grasslands, the coastal Douglas fir zone, and the province’s iconic coastal old-growth forests. …Ken Wu, with the Endangered Ecosystems Alliance hopes with a new premier in place, the B.C. government will shake off its lacklustre commitment to the environment. Eby has pledged to block new infrastructure for oil and gas and speed up protections of old-growth forests, but details are still scarce.

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Cascade Lower Canyon Community Forest says hello to the communities it serves

By Kemone Moodley
Hope Standard
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Are you aware that a three-way partnership exists — between Yale First Nation, the District of Hope, and the Fraser Regional District — dedicated to forest maintenance and community growth? The Cascade Lower Canyon Community Forest (CLCCF) is aware not everyone in Hope knows about them. But they’re hoping to spread the word about who they are, what they do, and just how dedicated they are to the community. “The CLCCF is an actual licensee. In technical terms, the licensee is what holds the forest tenure. And the CLCCF is a community forest tenure,” says Matt Wealick, the general manager of CLCCF and a forest ranger from Tzeachten First Nation. “We’re responsible for everything that happens underneath [the licensee]. So, everything from the planning and design and where the cut blocks go… the logging, the marketing of the wood that gets sold, and then re-planting for every cut block that we log.”

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

Letter by Larry Pynn, Maple Bay
Lake Cowichan Gazette
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

As the citizens of North Cowichan consider the future of the municipal forest reserve, they are being asked to choose among four management scenarios. …the amount of logging in each scenario is being expressed in cubic metres of timber. …The municipality says that one logging truck hauls from 30 to 35 cubic metres of timber, assuming 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. (4) Passive Conservation: No logging; no trucks. …Also note that UBC’s 30-year projection shows that revenues from both conservation options exceed those of logging.

Additional coverage in the Cowichan Valley Citizen, letter by Linda Hill: New forest management plan long overdue

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Public engagement on a new Forest Act

By Environment and Natural Resources
Government of Northwest Territories
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Yellowknife — The Government of the Northwest Territories will introduce new forest legislation in February 2023 to combine and update existing forest legislation. The two existing forest laws are the Forest Protection Act and the Forest Management Act. The new legislation will recognize the co-management of forests in the Northwest Territories, consider the many values of and pressures on the forest including climate change, redefine NWT forests as ecosystems, and modernize the NWT’s permitting and regulatory framework for forest resources. The new Forest Act is being developed collaboratively with Indigenous governments, Indigenous Organizations and Renewable Resource Boards. For information on the upcoming engagements, the public can review a Summary of the Proposal for a new Forest Act or the 2018 Forest Act Public Engagement What We Heard Report.

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Member of Parliament Bains Announces Over 21 Million New Trees in Partnership with Tree Canada

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

NEW WESTMINSTER, BC — Parm Bains, Member of Parliament for Steveston—Richmond East, on behalf Natural Resources Canada, and Tree Canada, announced a federal contribution of over $41 million to Tree Canada’s National Greening program through the 2 Billion Trees program. The 2 Billion Trees program is dedicated to supporting new tree planting projects using nature-based solutions to fight climate change and permanently increase forest cover in Canada. Tree Canada aims to accelerate mass seedling planting through afforestation and reforestation efforts with its National Greening program. The organization will plant over 21 million trees in the span of nine years, working with landholders, municipalities and partners to identify priority tree-planting projects to meet their environmental and social goals. …This is just one of the measures the Government of Canada is taking to protect nature as it invites some 196 countries to Montréal for COP15

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Government of Canada Contributes $4.7 Million to Cree Forestry Project

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
November 24, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

WASWANIPI, QC – In rural, remote and Indigenous communities across the country, the Canadian forest sector continues to play a significant role in maintaining and creating good jobs. Natural Resources Canada announced a $20-million investment, including a $4.7-million federal investment, to support the upgrade and restart of the Cree Forestry Project in Waswanipi, Quebec. This is a unique partnership between Mishtuk Corporation and Chantiers Chibougamau, a private firm in the region that operates forestry products facilities. The funding will support business and partnership planning for a more economically sustainable upgrade to the facility and site and for equipment reconditioning. The recommissioned facility will also produce mill-finished timber for retail markets with a focus on addressing the housing shortage in the Cree region of Quebec.

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Planting Over Seven Million Trees in Partnership with Forests Ontario

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
November 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA, Ontario — The Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Natural Resources, alongside Adam van Koeverden, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Health and to the Minister of Sport, and Lloyd Longfield, Member of Parliament for Guelph, announced a $12.7-million contribution to Forests Ontario to plant 7.2 million trees over a span of three years through the 2 Billion Trees program, aimed at partnering with governments and organizations to plant two billion trees over 10 years. As part of the 2 Billion Trees program, this project by Forests Ontario will increase forest cover and improve forest conditions. These trees will provide a nature-based climate solution by sequestering significant amounts of carbon, contribute to habitat restoration, including species and habitats at risk, and provide the many social, cultural, environmental and economic benefits that trees and forests offer.

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Film interconnecting colonization and deforestation in the boreal screened for senators, ministers

By Matteo Cimellaro
The National Observer
November 24, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

OTTAWA — On Nov. 23, ministers, senators and NGO representatives gathered… to watch and discuss a film that interweaves the deforestation of the boreal forest and colonial policy. The event was hosted by the film’s producer, Sen. Michelle Audette, and director Michael Zelniker, while current and former ministers of Crown-Indigenous relations, Marc Miller and Carolyn Bennett, sat in the front rows. …Minister of Natural Resources Jonathan Wilkinson wasn’t in attendance for the film screening, which gave a passionate defence of the boreal forest through the stories of First Nations Elders. The boreal is an essential carbon sink, yet the Canadian logging industry harvests 80 per cent of its lumber from old-growth boreal trees, according to the film. …Janet Sumner, of the Wildlands League said the film captures the parallel between climate collapse and colonization.

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Progress, protection and partnership: Minister Guilbeault’s statement on Canada’s path to COP15 in Montréal

Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

GATINEAU, QC – “Montréal, Canada will host the biggest international nature summit in a generation. Over the next three weeks, we’ll be highlighting Canadian actions under the broad themes of progress, protection and partnership—progress towards our goal of conserving 25 percent of Canada’s land and waters by 2025 and 30 percent by 2030; protection of iconic species; and partnership with Indigenous peoples… Each in its own way carries momentum into the nature and biological diversity conference. And each represents a waypoint on the path Canada will be pursuing in negotiations. On December 7, the Fifteenth Conference of the Parties (COP15) to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity will bring together 196 countries to blaze a path forward at a time when nature is under threat across the globe. …Today in Peterborough, Ontario, the Government of Canada is kicking things off with the announcement of $109 million from the Nature Smart Climate Solutions Fund for forty worthwhile projects.

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Nova Scotia designates blue felt as its provincial lichen

CBC News
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Nova Scotia has declared blue felt as its official lichen. The complex life form, also known by its scientific name, Pectenia plumbea, is quite common and grows on hardwood trees in the dense forest of the province. It can be distinguished by its leafy grey top with red dots and frosty edges, and its indigo blue underside. The species was declared the province’s official lichen, after Bill 230 passed at the Nova Scotia Legislature. …The designation is the first of its kind in Canada, Jonathan Riley, co-ordinator for the Municipality of Digby said. …Nova Scotia’s species at-risk database says the lichen can be found in 88 locations, which makes up a “considerable portion of the entire range known in North America,” but it’s threatened by climate change and airborne pollutants. That’s why it’s important to recognize their importance with this designation, Riley said.

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Canada is hosting the largest biodiversity conference in the world

By Ainslie Cruickshank
The Narwhal
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

There are no gray whales in the Atlantic Ocean anymore. The island marble butterfly and Pacific pond turtle have disappeared from B.C. And, in Ontario, the paddlefish and timber rattlesnake are locally extinct. Wetlands have been drained, grasslands destroyed and old-growth forests systematically cleared. It’s a global problem and it’s getting worse. And, yet there are solutions. What’s not clear is whether we come together to act in time. But soon delegates from countries around the world will converge in Montreal to hash out the final details of what could be a landmark agreement to save biodiversity. There is a lot at stake: biodiversity is all living things, the genetic diversity within species and the variety of ecosystems found on Earth. For better or worse, humans are part of it. …Here’s what you need to know in the lead up to COP15, the United Nations’ biodiversity conference in Montreal.

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How logging left Atlantic Canada’s trees vulnerable to Hurricane Fiona

By Haley Ritchie
The Narwhal
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

…Hurricane Fiona made landfall near Whitehead, N.S., on Sept. 24. After two days of heavy rain and wind gusts that reached 179km/h at their peak…Fiona ripped into the infrastructure of natural habitats, flattening forests and damaging generational woodlots… Wind disturbance is part of nature, but climate change is expected to increase the intensity of storms hitting Atlantic Canada. …the maritime forest has changed a great deal since the members of the Wabanaki Confederacy … were stewarding it. Old-growth forests have been cleared for agriculture and heavily logged: according to the Nova Scotia Nature Trust, only 0.6 per cent of the province’s forest is over 100 years old. And replanting has usually meant focusing on a less diverse collection of species and ages than was here originally. That youth and homogeneity puts the region at greater risk during natural disasters. …Community Forests International is encouraging land owners to consider making recovery decisions with biodiversity in mind.

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Meet the Mice Who Make the Forest

By Brandon Keim
New York Times
November 25, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

by Tristan Spinski

Hidden in the forest are the creatures whose labor makes the forest possible — the multitudes of microorganisms and invertebrates involved in maintaining that soil, and the animals responsible for delivering seeds too heavy to be wind-borne. If one is interested in the future of a forest — which tree species will thrive and which will diminish, or whether those threatened by a fast-changing climate will successfully migrate to newly hospitable lands — one should look to these seed-dispersing animals. “All the oaks that are trying to move up north are trying to track the habitable range,” said Ivy Yen, a biologist at the University of Maine who works at the Penobscot Experimental Forest in nearby Milford. “The only way they’re going to move with the shifting temperatures is with the animals,” Ms. Yen said of the trees. “Will animal personality affect that?”…the possible role of personality-specific foraging strategies of rodents in landscape migration had gone largely unexamined. 

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How Is Climate Resilience Being Incorporated into Forest Planning Initiatives

By Faith Yorba
The American Bar Association
November 23, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Climate change is altering our nation’s forests in significant ways in which our current management strategies are not equipped to deal with. …The Forest Service’s most recent planning guidance comes from a 2012 Planning Rule, which revamped the land-management planning strategy to align with current science and societal values. 10 years have passed since the 2012 Planning Rule was passed and only a small fraction of the 127 land-management plans have been revised. The majority of plans are years, if not decades, past due for revision. The forest plan revision process presents forest managers with an opportunity to incorporate resilience, in particular climate resilience, into new forest management initiatives. In the past several years, USFS has completed the revision process for a few plans, but these plans have had varying degrees of success with incorporating climate resilience. Meeting the challenge of climate change in forest planning requires USFS to use the forest plan revision process to address a changing climate.

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Arbor Day Foundation to Co-Organize 2023 World Forum on Urban Forests

By Arbor Day Foundation
Business Wire
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

LINCOLN, Nebraska — The Arbor Day Foundation announced that it will co-organize the second World Forum on Urban Forests in Washington, D.C. alongside the US FAO and others. The forum — held Oct. 16 to 20, 2023 — will convene hundreds of global experts to discuss how urban trees can create more resilient, healthy, and inclusive cities worldwide. The Arbor Day Foundation’s annual Partners in Community Forestry Conference and Alliance for Community Trees Day will also be woven into the weeklong event. The first World Forum on Urban Forests was held in 2018. …The USDA Forest Service will also take part in the event. Other forum co-organizers include the Polytechnic University of Milan, the Italian Society of Silviculture and Forest Ecology, the International Society of Arboriculture, the Smithsonian Institution, and the City of Washington, D.C.

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Hampton Lumber Establishes $100K Endowment for Students at Tillamook Bay Community College

By Hampton Lumber
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Hampton Lumber & Family Forests is pleased to announce the creation of a Hampton Lumber Scholarship endowment for Tillamook Bay Community College (TBCC). The endowment will provide scholarships for students in TBCC’s forestry and manufacturing and industrial technology (MIT) programs. “The health and vitality of our communities has always been a priority for Hampton,” said Hampton Lumber CEO, Steve Zika. “Ensuring opportunities and career pathways for local youth is a big part of that.” While Hampton already offers undergraduate and trade school scholarships to children, spouses, and domestic partners of employees, the TBCC scholarship is the company’s first public educational endowment. …Students will be able to apply for the scholarship beginning in spring 2023.

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Forest scents help University of Arizona researchers solve climate change mysteries at Biosphere 2

By Brooke Wagner
KOLD News 13
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

TUCSON, Arizona — Forests are Earth’s natural air purifier, but climate change is messing with this important tool for cleaning up our air. University of Arizona researchers at Biosphere 2 think the solution may have something to do with how plants smell. Dr. Joost van Haren has been studying how and why plants make compounds that create certain scents. He found they shift with conditions. Consider the smell of desert rain. “Here in Arizona for instance, when it rains, you immediately smell Creosote – that is a chemical released by the plants in response to the rainfall,” van Haren said. By forcing B2′s 30-acre “rainforest under glass” into an artificial drought for three months, the team could see – and smell – the effects of climate stress. …The plants can even use the compounds to warn each other about predators, like insects. 

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Forest plans slash pile fires; some trails may be temporarily closed

By Custer Gallatin National Forest
Billings Gazette
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Forest Service fire crews will be continuing to burn debris piles and larger machine generated landing piles throughout the winter, pending favorable conditions in the northern Bridger Mountains near Battle Ridge. The piles were generated from the Bozeman Municipal Watershed project, as well as the North Bridger’s Forest Health project. To date, Custer Gallatin National Forest firefighters have burned approximately 127 acres of small hand piles on Bozeman and Hebgen Lake ranger districts, with more burning planned throughout the winter. Limited trail closures are possible immediately adjacent to any large pile burning in Hyalite, Moser, Leverich and Kirk Hill areas or the vicinity of Battle Ridge, South Brackett Creek, and Fairy Lake Road in the northern Bridgers. Trail closures are expected to be brief, lasting approximately one day, to allow for safe burning and for smoke dispersal.

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Group Sues to Block Camel’s Hump Logging Plan

By Kevin McCallum
Sevendays VT
November 24, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

An environmental group is following through on its threat to sue the state to block the logging of thousands of acres of mature forest in Camel’s Hump State Forest.  Standing Trees, a Montpelier-based anti-logging group, filed the suit late Wednesday in Vermont Superior Court.   “Public forests are among our greatest bulwarks against climate change and extinction, but they’re being sold to the highest bidder while the public is kept in the dark about how decisions are made,” Zack Porter, executive director of Standing Trees, said in a press release. “If successful, this lawsuit will put the public back in control of public lands.”  …Standing Trees claims the state Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation relied on outdated science when drafting a plan for logging 3,800 acres of forest around Camel’s Hump over the next 15 years. That’s about triple the rate of harvesting in the forest done over the past 25 years. 

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Late Wildfire Season Points to Need for Better Forest Management

By Don Brunell
The Chronicle
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

CENTRALIA, Washington — Last summer, our state’s wildfire season was below normal — a welcome relief for firefighters and smoke-choked Washingtonians, especially city dwellers. However, that all changed this fall. …The conflagration led The Columbian to editorialize for better forest management. “Reducing the (wildfire) threat requires not only addressing climate change and funding suppression techniques, but also properly managing forests,” the editorial board wrote. Twenty years ago, President George W. Bush signed the Healthy Forest Restoration Act of 2003 legislation into law. It was designed to reduce the threat of destructive wildfires, create jobs in rural communities and to improve air quality. It was to be the framework for land managers to cut through the mountains of red tape, stop interagency turf spats and streamline permitting. …Unfortunately, Bush’s plan drew fire from preservationists who dismissed it as another excuse to log. …Meanwhile, our air quality denigrates.

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Bringing back the white pine, a foundational American tree

By Dan Kraker
Minnesota Public Radio
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

In a forest several miles north of Grand Rapids, Minn., John Pastor places his hands on the trunk of a giant white pine, cranes back his neck and gazes up into its crown. …“I’m interested in it scientifically, of course,” said Pastor, a retired University of Minnesota Duluth ecologist whose new book, “White Pine: The Natural and Human History of a Foundational American Tree,” comes out in January. But for him, standing next to such a giant tree, in a silent forest dotted with similar-sized old growth pines, is a spiritual experience. …But in recent years, efforts to restore the iconic white pine to Minnesota’s forests have slowly taken root. John Rajala is the CEO of a fifth-generation forest products company that owns the land where this towering white pine stands, his family has planted millions of white pine seedlings and perfected a method of protecting them so they grow into maturity.

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New Wildfire Detection Sensor Acts as ‘Electronic Nose’

By Scarlett Evans
IOT World Today
November 22, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Wildfires are becoming increasingly intense and common worldwide.  Early detection and warning systems are crucial to preventing these disasters, though existing devices typically use satellite or camera imaging for visual smoke detection, a technique that doesn’t always catch the danger in time. …Dryad partnered with Semtech and Swarm to use satellite and 4G networks to alert users to a fire threat before it becomes a blaze. The alert can be sent to local forest rangers, fire brigades or other emergency services, transmitting the  exact coordinates of the sensor’s location so emergency personnel can get to the exact location. The device’s built-in AI sensors detect abnormal gas patterns in the air and can distinguish between different “smells” of fire, allowing it to identify real fires and false alarms. …Dryad has 300 of its devices rolled out in test deployments in Germany, Greece, Spain, Portugal, Turkey, the U.S. and South Korea.

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Nitrogen deposition promotes tree growth and drives photosynthate allocation into wood

By Shang Nannan, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Phys.Org
November 21, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Human activities have greatly increased reactive nitrogen (N) emissions to the atmosphere, resulting in an increasing global atmospheric nitrogen deposition. …Photosynthetic carbohydrates allocation among different tree organs is an important factor determining forest carbon (C) sink capacity. Nitrogen deposition may affect the allocation of photosynthates, and thus affect forest carbon sink capacity. A research group led by Prof. Fang Yunting from the Institute of Applied Ecology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences conducted stimulated nitrogen deposition experiments. They monitored the responses of tree growth and litterfall production during 2014–2021 to detect nitrogen effects on tree growth and carbon allocation. …The results imply that nitrogen deposition promotes tree growth and may shift tree aboveground carbon allocation towards woody tissues over foliage in temperate and boreal forests around the world, which is conducive to enhancing forest stable carbon sink under the context of climate change such as global warming.

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Maryvale Paper Mill workers fear they’ll be stood down before Christmas

By Bec Symons
ABC News, Australia
November 18, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Workers at the Maryvale Paper Mill on Morwell’s fringe fear for their jobs in the lead up to Christmas as increasing restrictions on VicForests’ operations causes supply shortages.  This month the Supreme Court ordered stricter rules after it found the government agency failed to adequately protect the yellow-bellied glider and the endangered greater glider.  As timber industry workers and contractors protested on Friday, eucalypt branches, hard hats and reams of paper were placed on a coffin, symbolising the death of the timber industry.  The paper mill relies on a mixture of pine and hardwoods to manufacture paper, but needs hardwood to make white paper.  Opal Australia owns and runs the mill and said while no decisions on jobs had yet been made, they may be necessary.

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