Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

Extinction Rebellion is way more radical than you think

By Tristin Hopper
National Post
May 10, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

If you live in a major Western city, chances are good that you’ve had your commute held up at least once by an illegal Extinction Rebellion blockade. In the U.K., rail and road blockades by Extinction Rebellion have become so ubiquitous that it just spawned a Throne Speech promise from U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson that the group would soon face a crackdown. Extinction Rebellion is often portrayed in the media as just another green group pressing for “urgent action” on climate change, but that’s not even close to the whole story. Watch the Everything Should Be Better video or read the transcript in the read-more link to learn why Extinction Rebellion would dismantle democracy and kill millions if we actually listened to them. 

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Conservationists urge B.C. to protect bear dens ‘before it’s too late’

By Rochelle Baker
National Observer in the Toronto Star
May 11, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

BC Gov Photo

…This spring, as bears emerge from hibernation and logging season revs up, conservationists, First Nations and the wilderness tourism sector are urging the province to protect bear dens to guarantee the long-term survival of the culturally iconic species. More than a century of old-growth logging in coastal B.C. and on Vancouver Island has dramatically reduced the supply of suitable denning sites for black bear populations, said Mark Worthing, coastal projects lead at Sierra Club BC. Minor amendments to the provincial Wildlife Act, which already defends beaver dams and bird’s nests, could easily outline policy provisions and on-the-ground practices to protect bear dens, a recent report by the University of Victoria’s Environmental Law Centre suggested. …Protecting dens involves identifying them in cutblocks before timber harvesting begins, using best practices to protect them over time and during subsequent logging operations, and minimizing disturbances to bears.

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Province Fighting Climate Change by Fertilizing Forests with Urea, by Helicopter

By Michelle Gamage
The Tyee
May 12, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The B.C. government has committed $15 million over the next three years through its CleanBC fund to fertilize 25,000 hectares of the province’s temperate rainforests with urea, a nitrogen fertilizer synthesized to mimic animal pee.  …When the government first announced this initiative in late April, it said it would spend $15 million fertilizing 8,500 hectares that would result in 3.7 million tonnes of CO2 being absorbed by 2030.  That’s some impressive fertilizer — in that scenario, every hectare of fertilized forest would have absorbed 435 tonnes of extra CO2 over the next eight years. On May 4 the government changed the numbers to say it would spend the same amount of money to fertilize 25,000 hectares, thereby absorbing 1.3 million tonnes of CO2 by 2030 — which means each fertilized hectare would absorb an additional 52 tonnes of CO2.  …The funds will not go towards protecting old-growth forests or even trees in parks. 

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Record high log prices allows for innovative forest practices

By Jim Hilton
100 Mile House Free Press
May 10, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Last week our volunteer committee for the local forest community was able to meet in person for the first time in two years and it was nice to enjoy the benefits of face-to-face meetings.  An additional benefit was very good news concerning profits arising from the current unusually high log prices. What was even more encouraging was the news that our managers had been concentrating on the lower productivity stands and were still able to make a reasonable profit during the last cut control period.  …I think this would also be an opportunity to try some more innovative forest practices and based on some interviews done with people attending the recent Forest industry convention in Vancouver there seems to be an interest in a new approach to forestry in B.C.

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Citizen scientist tracking threatened birds near Fairy Creek denied court intervention

By Stefan Labbé
Victoria Times Colonist
May 10, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

A scientist documenting threatened birds in a swath of temperate rainforest on Vancouver Island has lost her bid to have a court review provincial authorizations that allowed a logging company to construct several gates into the territory.  In an application for judicial review, Royann Petrell, an associate professor emerita of chemical and biological engineering at UBC, claimed the forest minister’s decision to allow Teal Cedar Products Ltd. to build 10 gates blocking access to the forest made her work impossible.  “The B.C. government doesn’t generally know where endangered birds and other wildlife are located,” said Petrell in a statement leading up to the court case. “Citizen scientists like me are trying to fill that gap before the province’s few remaining areas of old-growth forest are logged.” …Petrell and her colleagues have documented the presence of western screech owls and the marbled murrelet, a seabird that nests in the coastal old-growth forests of British Columbia.

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Join CBC’s Johanna Wagstaffe and learn how forestry can help combat climate change

CBC News
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Johanna Wagstaffe

The extreme weather events of 2021 are not far behind us. British Columbians witnessed record-breaking heat, destructive fires and devastating floods. What are the forces behind such extreme weather events? Do land management practices, such as clearcutting, play a role? How about fire suppression? On June 7, CBC Vancouver’s senior meteorologist and seismologist Johanna Wagstaffe will moderate Fires and Floods, a free, online UBC webinar about the impacts of forestry practices on climate change. Learn about the forestry practices that are shaping B.C. landscapes and how the profession can help mitigate the impact of extreme weather-related events. This UBC webinar is open to everyone but registration is required. For more information, please visit forestry.ubc.ca. Speakers: Dr. Lori Daniels – Professor of Forest Ecology and Dr. Younes Alila – Professor of forest hydrology and watershed management, UBC Faculty of Forestry.

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Six First Nations Work Together For Better Stewardship of Eight Million-Acre Territory

By Nanwakolas Council
First Nations Drum
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Cape Mudge, BC – Environmental and cultural Guardians from the Nanwakolas Council’s six member First Nations are gathering in person for a week of specialized training with Indigenous, provincial and federal environmental experts, starting May 9. The training includes strategies to better protect local ecosystems and cultural resources within their territories, where presently, only 20 young Guardians are on duty to monitor eight million acres on Northern Vancouver Island and the adjacent mainland south-central coast of the Great Bear Rainforest. The Guardian programs of the individual Nations … are supported by the Council’s Ha-ma-yas Stewardship Network (Ha-ma-yas), which aims to build indigenous’ stewardship capacity to ensure the effective management of cultural heritage resources, ecological values, and economic development opportunities. …The gathering … includes specialized training on land and water provided by current guardians, provincial natural resource officers, experts from the Hakai Institute, Canadian Coast Guard, Provincial Natural Resource Officers, and BC Institute of Technology. 

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Presence of dutch elm disease in Sask. up 25 per cent in 2021

By Jennifer Ackerman
The Star Phoenix
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The number of trees that fell victim to Dutch elm disease in 2021 was up 25 per cent compared to the year before, according to Saskatchewan’s Ministry of Environment. “Dutch elm disease is well-established in eastern Saskatchewan and it continues to spread west,” Josh Pol, a forest health specialist with the Ministry of Environment’s Forest Service Branch, said in an interview Friday. “Currently, it has been detected as far west as the Outlook area.” In 2021, a buffer survey identified 570 trees that were removed in October and November, Pol said, an increase from 457 trees in 2020. He said the movement of firewood has a lot to do with it, and the weather can also influence the spread of insects. …As it does regularly, the ministry posted a request for proposals (RFP) on May 5, looking for professional tree care companies to remove and dispose of any trees found infected with Dutch elm disease…

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Interior Logging Association Trade Show in Kamloops this weekend

By The Interior Logging Association
Castanet
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

After two years of COVID-19 restrictions, the Interior Logging Association (ILA) is back again with its 64th annual AGM and Trade Show on May 12, 13 and 14 at the Kamloops Powwow Grounds. “We are really excited to be able to have the show this year,” ILA general manager Todd Chamberlain says. …It’s no secret that the forestry sector has seen increasing challenges over the last few years, especially with rising fuel prices, escalating equipment costs, old growth deferrals, Bill 13 contracts and COVID. Despite those challenges, Chamberlain expressed that the ILA has been working even harder to support its members. …The Interior Logging 64th annual Trade Show indoor and outdoor displays will be held on Friday (May 13) from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and Saturday, May 14, from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the Kamloops Powwow Grounds, which is located at 100-345 Powwow Tr. in Kamloops.

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Permanent endowment fund created for Cranbrook Community Forest Society

By Corey Bullock
Cranbrook Daily Townsman
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Reps from CFKR and CCFS

A fundraising initiative between the Community Foundation of the Kootenay Rockies (CFKR) and the Cranbrook Community Forest Society (CCFS) will see the establishment of a permanent endowment fund created for the CCFS. CFKR has announced that they will be launching the new Cranbrook Community Forest Society legacy fund, which will support the CCFS with an annual grant, in perpetuity. The two organizations are hoping to raise $20,000 to establish the new fund. Several donations have already been made, including $500 from Jean-Ann Debreceni, who is a long-time user of the Community Forest, along with her husband, Joe, and a further donation of $2,500, from another dedicated community forest supporter, CFKR explained. …“The annual grant from this fund will support our ongoing work to maintain and enhance the Cranbrook Community Forest, which is such an important recreational, educational, and environmental resource in our community,” CCFS Board Chair Joseph Cross said.

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Canadian Institute of Forestry Offering a Teachers’ Forestry Tour on Vancouver Island

Canadian Institute of Forestry
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada West

Nanaimo, BC – Calling all teachers and educators in the Nanaimo area! If you are looking for a unique opportunity to bring forestry into your classroom, the Canadian Institute of Forestry/Institut forestier du Canada (CIF-IFC) is organizing a Teachers’ Forestry Tour and you are invited to register! Hosted in collaboration with the CIF-IFC Vancouver Island Section and Vancouver Island University (VIU), the Teachers’ Forestry Tour will take place on June 3, 2022 in Nanaimo, Vancouver Island. With funding in part from the Government of Canada, the CIF-IFC will be hosting and coordinating Teachers’ Forestry Tours across Canada over a two-year period (2021-2023). …The tour will inform teachers about basic forestry concepts, including sustainable forest management, Indigenous participation in forestry and the links between forests and climate change.

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This tiny town wants to make itself as fireproof as possible — but they can’t do it alone

By Ashley Moliere
CBC News
May 7, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ken Hoyle remembers checking the thermometer on the back deck of his home in Hedley, B.C., in late June last year, watching as the mercury rose to 46 degrees during the sweltering heat dome.   …”Obviously Lytton was a real wake-up in terms of the rapidity at which a fire could go through a community,” said Hoyle, who heads the Hedley/Upper Similkameen Indian Band FireSmart community board.  …But as communities like Hedley work with a sense of urgency to protect themselves from wildfires, they are, to some degree, at the mercy of the province, which is responsible for cleaning up combustible material on Crown land.   …The steep, treed slopes surrounding the unincorporated community are a significant contributor to its fire risk, according to Bruce Blackwell, the principal forestry consultant of B.A. Blackwell & Associates.  Blackwell’s company assessed Hedley’s fire risk in 2020 and determined that the village’s location supports “higher levels of extreme fire behaviour.”

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Climate change activists to escalate disruption in Vancouver over old-growth logging

By Mike Howell
Castanet
May 6, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Zain Haq

A spokesperson for a group of activists who have shut down Vancouver intersections and bridges linking the North Shore is promising an escalation in actions in June with the purposeful intent to increase policing costs to a point that governments have to step in and respond to demands to address climate change.  Zain Haq, co-founder of Save Old Growth, said the organization’s fight is not with police, despite Vancouver Police Chief Adam Palmer saying publicly at two recent meetings that he is concerned about a ballooning cost to manage environment-related protests and concerns over safety of all involved.  “Our plan would be in June to escalate to a point where the cost is just too high for the police to see this as a public safety issue or as a protesting issue,” said Haq.

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Is small-scale forestry the big idea B.C. needs?

By Louis Bockner
The Narwhal
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

George Delisle

George Delisle’s …woodlot is a 15 minute drive west from Rock Creek in British Columbia’s Boundary region. The log home that he and Frauke recently moved into is within walking distance and sits on a property Delisle bought from his uncle in the 1980s. …Woodlots are restricted areas of woodland that are normally harvested as a source of fuel or lumber. The provincial program has been in operation for almost 75 years, but originally it was focused on giving farmers rights to forested Crown land. Then, in 1979, an amendment to the Forest Act enabled non-farmers to get woodlot tenures and the program grew dramatically. …Delisle also explains that he believes large-scale industrial forestry is too prescriptive. “Nature doesn’t work that way,” he says. …The Narwhal also reached out to the Forest Products Association of Canada, which declined to comment, and the BC Council of Forest Industries and Ministry of Forests, who did not respond. 

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Westbank First Nation forestry company getting ready to salvage log site of last year’s Mount Law fire

By Colin Dacre
Castanet
May 7, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Westbank First Nation’s forestry company is preparing to salvage log the site of last summer’s Mount Law wildfire in Glenrosa. Consultation documents being shared with Peachland council show two planned cutblocks of a combined size of 104 hectares. Multiple other smaller non-wildfire-salvage harvests are planned for the Jack Creek and Lacoma Lake areas. All the planned harvest areas are within the Westbank First Nation community forest. “It should be noted that Ntityix (WFN’s forestry company) have recently shown themselves to be stewards of the watershed through selective logging blocks and reclamation of legacy logging roads; one of the primary sources of sedimentation into the creeks,” said a report to Peachland council from the municipality’s operations director Shawn Grundy. …Members of Peachland’s council have in the past been vocally opposed to logging in watershed. The municipality, however, has no ability to block the work even if it were to formally oppose it.

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Mississauga begins aerial spray to control tree-killing insects

By Steve Pecar
insauga
May 11, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Mississauga’s aerial spray program begins early next week in an effort to save the city’s tree canopy. The spray is meant to control caterpillars that feed off a variety of trees before eventually turning into moths that then begin the cycle again. Low flying helicopters are scheduled to be out in the early hours of May 15 with the program continuing at various intervals until the middle of June. Mississauga has deemed the program necessary as the insect (formerly called the gypsy moth caterpillar but now known as the spongy moth or the LDD moth) feeds off leaves which can lead to the killing of trees and at an alarming rate. The spraying is done in the spring with the hope that it will kill larvae and caterpillars before they turn into the moths. The aerial spray program is expected to protect hardwood trees like maple, oak, elm, ash, poplar, willow and birch.

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Bringing Indigenous knowledge to forest conservation

The Kingston Whig-Standard
May 11, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Hunter Corbiere

Hunter Corbiere, an Indigenous forestry consultant, will present Two-Eyed Seeing, combining Western and Indigenous perspectives on forestry June 4. She will be the keynote speaker at the annual general meeting of the Quinte chapter of the Ontario Woodlot Association. The Ontario Woodlot Association (OWA) stands for healthy, productive woodlots and sustainable management of Ontario’s forests. We are a community of woodlot owners who are helping each other to become the best possible stewards of our woodlands. Come out and join us for the opportunity to learn and share ideas about practicing good forestry. …Corbiere is a recent forest technician graduate of Sir Sandford Fleming College. She sees value in both the scientific approach and the Indigenous tradition. At Fleming, Corbiere helped the forestry program obtain an Indigenous perspectives designation.

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Friends of Wabakimi look to protect new areas near the NW Ontario wilderness park

By Gary Rinne
Thunder Bay News Watch
May 10, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

THUNDER BAY — Friends of Wabakimi, a 250-member group of wilderness paddlers and recreational businesses, is lobbying for the preservation of new areas adjacent to the large wilderness park northwest of Lake Nipigon. …Vern Fish of Waterloo, Iowa is the president of Friends of Wabakimi. He says the group has participated in the Ontario government’s planning process for the Wabadowgang Noopming Forest in the Armstrong area. It’s proposed four new Conservation Reserves and limitations on planned logging roads within a designated woodland caribou special area of concern. …For Kristen Setala, the upcoming trip is also an opportunity for her to gather data for Ontario’s third Breeding Bird Atlas. Setala is the Community Science intern for Ontario Nature, based in Thunder Bay. According to Ontario Nature, habitat loss is the greatest threat to breeding birds in Canada.

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Reprieve for critically endangered Atlantic whitefish as logging plans halted

By Paul Withers
CBC News
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

The Nova Scotia government has indefinitely delayed an application to log on Crown land near Bridgewater, N.S., to protect critically endangered Atlantic whitefish. Westfor had applied to cut near lakes in the Petite Rivière watershed, the last place on earth where Atlantic whitefish still survive in the wild. The Department of Natural Resources and Renewables said Monday it has “placed an indefinite hold” on the proposed harvest plan. It applied to log three parcels of Crown land near Minamkeak Lake, one of three lakes where Atlantic whitefish, the ancient relative of Atlantic salmon, persist. Minamkeak is the only one of the three lakes free of invasive chain pickerel. …In a statement, Westfor accepted the results of the department’s review, which found “that at the planning level the amount road work required would not meet Best Management Practices for this site.”

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First Nations emergency professionals gather in Thunder Bay, Ont., ahead of wildfire season

By Logan Turner
CBC News
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Northern Ontario First Nations emergency management professionals and organizations gathered in Thunder Bay, Ont., in preparation for the upcoming wildfire season. The inaugural “After Action Responders Forum,” hosted by the Northern Ontario Emergency Management Working Group, was designed to give First Nations and people working in emergency management a chance to share experiences, challenges and best practices from previous years. …The conference came on the heels of a record wildfire season — with more hectares of land burned in Ontario in 2021 that in any other year in history and over 3,000 people forced from their homes, many of them from remote First Nations in the northwest. …Derek Maud, a former chief and now the community emergency management coordinator for Lac Seul First Nation said it was an important networking opportunity, given that the position of community emergency management coordinator is a relatively new one for First Nations.

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Labor shortage leaves US struggling to hire firefighters despite record wildfire funding

By Zach Urness
The Register-Guard
May 11, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The United States government has committed a record-setting amount of money to fighting wildfires this year during what promises to be a busy season, but it remains unclear whether the number of firefighters needed will be available amid a nationwide labor crunch.  With a busy start to the fire season in the Southwest and drought fueling high wildfire danger from the Great Plains to Northern California, federal officials are scrambling to hire roughly 16,900 fire personnel that include hotshots, smokejumpers and helitack crews.  ..The lawmakers said staffing could be below 75% in some regions this season.  …In testimony before the Senate Appropriations Committee May 4, Forest Service Chief Randy Moore said the agency had hired about 10,200 firefighters, out of its goal of 11,300. But, he added, some areas had only reached 50% of the staffing goal.

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U.S. Forest Service is short thousands of firefighters amid pay raise delay

By Nova Safo
Marketplace.org
May 10, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The U.S. Forest Service is short thousands of wildland firefighters as it enters what is expected to be another challenging fire season amid a historic drought in the West.  The agency has publicly said it has 90% of the staff it needs, or 10,200 firefighters. But Forest Service Deputy Chief Jaelith Hall-Rivera told Marketplace that that figure was the sum of the firefighters the agency had “either on board or have made offers to.” But as of the end of April, the agency actually had 8,300 firefighters on its force. …That is only 73% of the force the agency has said it was on track to marshal to battle this year’s fires. A $600 million pay raise approved by Congress has been stuck for months in bureaucratic morass as various parts of the government figure out how to implement the raises. 

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What does Biden’s Executive Order Mean for “Old and Mature” Forests?

By Nick Smith, executive director
Healthy Forests, Healthy Communities
May 6, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

First, it’s important to note that Executive Orders don’t carry the force of law, like an Act of Congress would. …President Biden’s Executive Order does not ban timber harvesting, and it does not identify logging as a threat to old and mature trees. Rather, it identifies “climate impacts, catastrophic wildfires, insect infestation, and disease” as the primary threats to all forests, including older forests. It also takes aim at illegal logging and deforestation in other countries and seeks to limit the trade of illegally sourced wood products. Much of the Executive Order represents a reasonable effort to protect forests at home and abroad from the impacts of climate change. However, it may also undermine that effort by adding more bureaucracy and red tape on federal agencies that are already struggling to implement forest health projects and hire more land managers and firefighters to carry out the work. 

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How the future trees of New Mexico were almost destroyed by wildfires

By Elizabeth Miller
The Washington Post
May 12, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

SANTA FE, N.M. — Saving tree seedlings critical to restoring forests in the Southwest from the fires ripping through northern New Mexico took four trucks and three trailers — and two trips into a wildfire evacuation zone. The New Mexico State University John T. Harrington Forestry Research Center, which sits in the verdant Mora River valley in northern New Mexico’s mountains among scattered rural communities, houses the state’s only facility for growing tree seedlings and one of the Southwest’s only seed banks. …But last week, the seeds and young trees themselves were in peril when the Calf Canyon Fire, New Mexico’s second largest fire on record, closed in on the center. So a team of university staffers and state employees sprang into action to save all they could from the flames, which have now burned 259,810 acres and are only 33 percent contained.

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How does Arizona stop a catastrophic wildfire? The answer lies in low-value trees

By Daniel Stellar
AZCentral
May 13, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Arizona’s early start to the wildfire season is just the latest example of suffering the consequences of the 20th century strategy that suppressed blazes and let forests grow abnormally dense. Add historic drought, extreme heat and the results are predictable. …A public-private partnership launched the Four Forest Restoration Initiative, or 4FRI, with a goal of restoring 2.4 million acres of national forest land. The program, for a variety of reasons, has never come close to reaching its annual goals. Work by The Nature Conservancy in partnership with industry and the U.S. Forest Service has identified a suite of business practices and innovative efficiencies that may allow the initiative to achieve its potential and make efficient use of new federal funding. …The Nature Conservancy operates much like a learning laboratory and tests various efficiencies with the intent of saving money and time for the forest industry. 

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The biggest living thing on Earth is being nibbled to death. Can it be saved?

By Craig Welch
National Georgraphic
May 11, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

A tree is sometimes more than just a tree. Quaking aspens, North America’s most widely distributed tree, often reproduce through cloning. What appear as individual trees are instead collections of genetically identical stems. … Each clonal aspen stand is a single being.  …In south-central Utah, up near 9,000 feet on the Colorado Plateau, in a stretch of national forest dotted with juniper and sagebrush, there stands a peculiar aspen grove. Instead of dozens or even hundreds of clonal trunks, there are 47,000, all connected to a single root structure. Known as Pando—Latin for “I spread”—this behemoth stretches across 106 acres, an area twice the size of New York City’s Grand Central Station. …And yet, through the way the land and animals have been managed around Pando, it’s being destroyed, one clone at a time. …The forest is growing older. But the next generation isn’t surviving. 

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Milling Thinned Trees Can Foot Bill to Reduce Wildfire Risks

By Don C. Brunell, past president – Association of Washington Business
The Chronicle
May 10, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Don C. Brunell

Thinning public woodlands to remove millions of dead trees is a way to generate much needed cash to reduce wildfire risks, improve forest health, and protect rural homeowners and farms. It is money the U.S. Forest Service and Washington’s Department of Natural Resources don’t have because the bulk of their funds are tied up fighting fires. …In the Lake Chelan area, community leaders are working with state and federal forest managers to emulate the successful Colville cooperative 54,000-acre forest restoration project … where Vaagen Brothers Lumber now turn former fire fuels into cross-laminated timber. …A CLT plant is under consideration in Chelan …The key to reducing wildfire risk and expanding CLT manufacturing is a reliable and steady supply of thinned trees. Without a long-term flow of trees from federal and state forests, there are no added jobs or no laminated timbers. Instead the accumulations of wildfire fuels grows…

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Utah University President’s Commencement Leans on Trees

Utah Valley University News
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Astrid Tuminez

Good evening, graduates and congratulations! …In 2021, the most powerful book I read was Richard Powers’ “The Overstory,” a novel about people and trees, but mostly trees. …Did you know that trees are social beings that communicate underground and above ground? Did you know that trees can filter poison from the ground? …As you leave UVU, I hope you will always remember the phrase “Did you know?” It will remind you to be curious, ask questions, and pay attention to the things that are important. Pay attention — to trees, loved ones, a new morning, the work in front of you. …In “The Overstory,” one of the main characters is Olivia Vandergriff, a privileged young woman away at college. …She ditches college, drives west, and finds her life’s purpose with a group trying to save old growth redwood forests from a logging company.

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Enberg Logging named 2022 Minnesota Logger of the Year

The Pilot Independent
May 10, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Enberg Logging of Motley has been named the 2022 Minnesota Logger of the Year by the Minnesota Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) Implementation Committee (MN SIC). The award was presented to Rod Enberg at a Minnesota Logger Education Program (MLEP) workshop in Bemidji. The Logger of the Year Award recognizes outstanding independent logging contractor performance with the purpose of honoring Minnesota’s competent professional independent logging contractors. The formal nomination clearly demonstrates that Rod Enberg and his crew are recognized by their peers for professionalism, commitment to sustainable forestry, using best business management practices, trade organization involvement, fostering excellent landowner and forester relationships, and for their exceptional community outreach activities.

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Martens are a sign of a healthy forest in Maine

By David Guildford
News Center Maine
May 9, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

ORONO, Maine — The American marten is a mammal and member of the weasel family. …For University of Maine wildlife habitat professor Alessio Mortelliti, seeing a marten in a stretch of Maine woods means those woods are healthy. “Being a predator — being positioned relatively high up in the food chain — is always a good sign,” Mortelliti said. “In terms of when you have those predators, it means you have the whole food chain below them.” Over a five-year study, Mortelliti set up game cameras around the state and found not just a food chain but a crossroads of Maine’s iconic species running right through marten habitat at every turn. They published their findings, calling the marten an “umbrella monitoring species.” …Weiskittel said his job is to teach the next generation of Maine foresters to think about animal populations as much as profit.

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‘America’s Forests With Chuck Leavell’ Broadcast on Arkansas PBS

By Michelle Parks
The University of Arkansas News
May 10, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Chuck Leavell & Becca Ohman

Two Arkansas-filmed episodes of the PBS series America’s Forests with Chuck Leavellwill make their Arkansas PBS broadcast debut this month. The episodes were organized in large part by the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design and produced with funding from the school, the U of A and numerous forest-centered stakeholders in Arkansas. The Delta episode airs at 4:30 p.m., May 16, while the Ozarks episode airs at 10 a.m., May 22. …Leavell may be best known as the keyboardist and musical director for The Rolling Stones, but he is also an educated and enthusiastic forestry advocate, conservationist and tree farmer. As host of the America’s Forests series, Leavell serves as the on-camera guide, traveling across the country to interview people who are passionate about the gifts provided by the woodlands and exploring creative solutions to complex problems impacting this important natural resource.

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Maryland State Forests Earn Sustainability Certification for 19th Consecutive Year

Maryland Department of Natural Resources
May 10, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) announced that the major five state forests comprising Maryland’s state forest system – totaling more than 200,000 acres –- this year received two favorable independent audit reports recognizing that DNR is managing the state forests according to internationally accepted Forest Certification standards for sustainability. These positive 2022 surveillance audits by the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) and Forest Stewardship Council(FSC) show Maryland’s state forests meet their standards for sustainable certification. …Maryland was the first state in the nation to achieve dual Forest Certification by both FSC and SFI as a result of the initial Audit conducted on Chesapeake Forest in 2003. After that first successful audit, the remainder of the five major state forests in Maryland were audited and certified to be sustainably managed in 2011. 

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Carbon Code clamps down on forestry land ‘gold rush’

By Gordon Davidson
The Scottish Farmer
May 13, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

SCOTLAND — A damper has been thrown over the market for land being bought up for forestry, in the form of tighter rules for assessing a tree-planting projects’ eligibility for carbon credits. Previously, a forestry project’s owners could include the purchase cost of the land in the calculation of whether or not it needed carbon credits to be viable – a detail that fuelled runaway prices for land, as investors could always rely on the carbon credits to recoup over-the-score land bids. Recognising this market distortion, not least because farming bodies have been ringing increasingly strident alarm bells about the amount of agricultural land being devoured by corporate tree-planting, Scottish Forestry has moved to strengthen the Woodland Carbon Code with revised ‘additionality’ tests.

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Wombat Forest salvage logging continues after Game Management Authority removes protesters

By Gavin McGrath
ABC News, Australia
May 12, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The removal of logs felled by last year’s ferocious storm through Victoria’s central highlands has resumed in the Wombat Forest after protesters were removed from the worksite.  Logging contractors were not impeded by local environmentalists from the Wombat Forestcare group on Wednesday, although several of the protestors continued to monitor the clearing work from a nearby road.  The contractors and the protesters have accused each other of threatening behaviour during the dispute.  Contractor Jim Greenwood said his team of four workers was employed by Vic Forest to remove the logs through 120ha of the forest at Babbington Hill.  He said it came at the request of the commercial arm of the Dja Dja Wurrung Clans Aboriginal Corporation.  …Wombat Forestcare spokesperson Gayle Osborne said her group was protesting the damage that was being caused by the group.

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4 reasons why the Morrison government’s forestry cash splash is bad policy

By David Lindenmayer, Brendan Mackey, Heather Keith
The Conversation AU
May 12, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

This federal election campaign has involved very little discussion of environmental or natural resource policies, other than mining. An exception is a A$220 million Morrison government pledge for the forestry industry.  The money will be invested in new wood-processing technology and forest product research, and used to extend 11 so-called “regional forestry hubs”. Some $86 million will aid the establishment of new plantations.  Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he would not support “any shutdown of native forestry” and claimed the funding would secure 73,000 existing forestry jobs. The spending on native forests, however, is problematic. In 2019-20, 87% of logs harvested in Australia came from plantations, and more investment is needed to bring this to 100%.   …Native forest logging has long been a marginal economic prospect. …Native forest logging in Australia generates around 38 million tonnes of carbon dioxide (CO₂) a year. 

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New Private Native Forestry Code of Practice fails koalas

The Echo
May 11, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

NSW Farmers has welcomed the changes to the State government’s changes to private native forestry codes (PNFC) that were announced last week. However, Nature Conservation Council, North East Forest Alliance (NEFA) and Independent MP, Justin Field, have all expressed serious misgivings over the reduction of protections to the habitat of endangered species, especially koalas.  NEFA considers that that the new Private Native Forestry Code of Practice is a step backwards, that will increase the extinction risk of our most imperilled species of plants and animals NEFA spokesperson, Dailan Pugh, said.  …‘Under this code most threatened species of plants and animals will get no real protection whatsoever. The only improvement is an increase in the exclusions around headwater streams, though at 10m this is still dramatically less than the 30m identified as necessary in numerous reviews.’

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Greenbushes timber mill closes earlier than expected after native forest logging ban

By Sam Bold & Georgia Hargreaves
ABC News, Australia
May 11, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

One of Western Australia’s major forestry towns has lost a pivotal employer with the earlier-than-expected shutdown of the Greenbushes timber mill — a move that has caught workers off guard.  Queensland-based company Parkside last week announced the closure of its Greenbushes sawmill in WA’s South West region — the first to officially close since the government announced a ban on native timber logging last September.   The workers’ last day was set to be Friday, however the ABC understands the mill closed on Tuesday.   While Parkside did not respond to questions from the ABC, Forest Industry Federation of WA (FIFWA) president Ian Telfer spoke on its behalf, saying the decision to close early would give displaced workers the opportunity to access support services and apply to receive compensation paym

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The bark beetle situation in Europe – an update

By Per Jonsson, Editor
Forestry.com
May 11, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The bark-beetles (Ips typographus) have had good times in the last few years. Especially in Germany and the Czech Republic. Compared to those two countries we have been lucky here in Sweden so far. But there are worrying circumstances to keep an eye on for the upcoming season. In March, local storms and snow damages in south Sweden have rolled out the red carpet for the bark-beetle. …In the Czech Republic, the relatively cold and moist vegetation season in Central Europe in 2021 slowed down the bark-beetle calamity. …Germany in 2021 was spared from storms and drought… but BMEL informs that the recovery is slow. In 2021, 40,6 million cubic meters of damaged wood were felled. …It seems that most countries in Europe have the situation under control.

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‘Record after record’: Brazil’s Amazon deforestation hits April high, nearly double previous peak

The Guardian
May 7, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Deforestation in Brazil’s Amazon surged to record levels for the month of April, nearly doubling the area of forest removed in that month last year – the previous April record – preliminary government data has shown, alarming environmental campaigners.  In the first 29 days of April, deforestation in the region totalled 1,012.5 square km (390 square miles), according to data from national space research agency Inpe on Friday. The agency, which has compiled the monthly data series since 2015/2016, will report data for the final day of April next week.  April is the third monthly record this year, after new highs were also observed in January and February.  Destruction of the Brazilian Amazon in the first four months of the year also hit a record for the period of 1,954 square km (754 square miles), an increase of 69% compared to the same period of 2021, clearing an area more than double the size of New York City.   

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Endangered oak’s secret home beneath a NSW volcano its only hope of survival

By Laura Chung
Sydney Morning Herald
May 7, 2022
Category: Forestry
Region: International

Hidden away on the southern side of an ancient volcano in northern NSW is a unique rainforest that will house 20 rare seedlings of a tree, but whether they will survive as climate change takes hold is in the hands of scientists.  The endangered Nightcap Oak tree is part of the unique rainforest ecosystem north-east of Lismore, which also houses a range of other species that migrated when Australia was still connected to Asia, Antarctica and South America via land bridges about 40 million years ago.  Back then, rainforests were much more common across Australia and Nightcap Oak trees were found in many of them. As Australia moved north over millennia and the climate warmed, the Nightcap Oak can now only survive in a tiny pocket of the state’s north.  

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