Category Archives: Forestry

Forestry

The Government of Canada invests in nature-based solutions to help fight climate change and protect biodiversity across the country

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
The Government of Canada
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

On July 18, 2024, the Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change, announced $89.1 million for 10 greenhouse gas emissions reduction projects funded through the Nature Smart Climate Solutions Fund.

  • Alberta: Métis Nation of Alberta – $4,831,200
  • British Columbia: BC Parks Foundation – $37,000,000
  • British Columbia: Nature Trust of BC – $8,365,375
  • British Columbia: Nuxalk Nation – $4,455,000
  • Manitoba: Fisher River Cree Nation – $5,192,700
  • Manitoba: Manitoba Habitat Conservancy – $6,152,640 
  • New Brunswick: Community Forests International – $9,000,000
  • Ontario: Kawartha Land Trust – $7,000,000
  • Ontario: Conservation Ontario – $1,586,343
  • Quebec: Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society – Quebec Chapter – $5,535,577

 

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Forest Products Association of Canada Announces Winners of 2024 Green Dream Internship Program

Forest Products Association of Canada
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada

Summer 2024 will be one to remember for five students selected as winners of Forest Products Association of Canada’s (FPAC) Green Dream Internship Program. Launched in 2013, the national initiative highlights the perspectives and experiences of students working in the forest sector over a six-week period, accompanied by a $1,000 scholarship to support their education. Throughout the program, Green Dream Interns will use social media to share their personal insights into forestry careers and the forest sector.

2024 Green Dream Interns include:

  • Keegan Ashley, Interfor Adams Lake Division – Chase, British Columbia
  • Kevin Diep, Tolko Industries – High Level, Alberta
  • Philippe Bernard, Produits forestiers Résolu – Alma, Québec
  • Ally-Ann Romanchuk, Alberta Newsprint Company – Whitecourt, Alberta
  • Chloe Tees, Canfor – Vancouver, British Columbia

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BC’s latest ‘old growth’ conservation announcement is mostly not about old growth

By Jimmy Thomson
Canada’s National Observer
July 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

In late June, British Columbia and the federal government announced that they’ve helped non-profit foundations and trusts buy eight parcels of land from private owners for old-growth conservation, largely on and around Vancouver Island. But all but one of the forests included in this purchase announcement do not contain old-growth trees defined by the B.C. government. …Instead, seven of the eight purchased properties contain what’s called “recruitment” old-growth — that is, forests that have been logged. For Torrance Coste (Wilderness Committee) buying these lands to protect them from future threats of logging and development is important, both ecologically and for reconciliation. But it’s dishonest to announce this as a win, particularly as old-growth logging continues. A spokesperson for the B.C. Ministry said… “These recruitment old growth trees are technically second growth [are] important because “they are expected to develop old forest characteristics sooner than other second growth forests.”

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B.C. to get about $50M in new federal climate solutions funding

The Canadian Press in Victoria News
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Steven Guilbeault

The federal government is spending $89 million to fund 10 greenhouse gas emission reduction projects as the government works toward the goal of conserving 30 per cent of the country’s land and water by 2030. Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault made the announcement in British Columbia on Thursday, where he said the “evidence of climate change is striking,” referencing extreme weather events including flooding, drought and “devastating” wildfire seasons. “With the goal of reversing biodiversity loss across the country, bit by bit, we’re getting there, protecting prime lands and waters that serve up some of the most important habitats for imperilled species.” He added that the projects are also aiding in the fight against climate change. Guilbeault said about $50 million of the funding is slated for major projects in the province. …Other projects being funded through the federal Nature Smart Climate Solutions Fund will take place in Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Ontario, and Quebec.

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New harvest level set for Slocan Valley and Arrow Lake areas

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

British Columbia’s deputy chief forester has set the new allowable annual cut (AAC) level for Tree Farm Licence 3 (TFL) located north of Castlegar. The new AAC for the TFL is 56,100 cubic metres. This is a 30% reduction from the previous AAC, while remaining in line with the average harvest level in the past 12 years. The new level reflects adjustments made to account for lower harvest performance on slopes greater than 50%. New AAC levels have also been set for Tree Farm Licence 23 (TFL), located northwest of Castlegar, near Arrow Lake. The new AAC for the TFL is 382,800 cubic metres. This is a 7% reduction from the previous AAC, while remaining above the average annual harvest level of the past 12 years. The Province and First Nations have worked with industry to defer harvest of at-risk old-growth forest while work progresses on long-term approaches to old-growth management in the Kootenay-Boundary region. [Tree Frog has combined two government press releases into this single story – links to each are provided in the text above]

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Wildlife group concerned over 603 B.C. black bears put down in 2023

By Jane Skrypnek
Penticton Western News
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Fur-Bearers, a B.C.-based wildlife charity says it continues to be concerned about the number of black bears killed by conservation officers in the province. Last year 603 black bears were put down, according to data obtained by the Fur-Bearers through a Freedom of Information request. That’s 68 more than the annual average of 535 since 2015, when the Fur-Bearers began tracking the numbers. Executive director, Lesley Fox, said part of the sudden jump may be attributable to 2023’s record-breaking wildfire season, which would have displaced wildlife and possibly reduced their natural food sources, sending them to urban areas to look for alternatives. There, attractants are a constant issue … increasing the likelihood of some kind of conflict or the bear become too habituated. If the BC Conservation Officer Service then determines the bear poses some kind of threat to public safety, it may decide to put it down.

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Protecting nature in Manitoba to help fight climate change and protect biodiversity

By Environment and Climate Change Canada
Cision Newswire
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

WINNIPEG, MB – Conserving and restoring nature is fundamental for capturing harmful greenhouse gas emissions by pulling more carbon dioxide out of the air, while also safeguarding the places and species that are part of who we are as Canadians. The Government of Canada has launched the largest conservation campaign in the country’s history in order to meet its emissions reduction targets and reverse biodiversity loss by 2030. The government of Canada announced over $11 million for two major greenhouse gas emissions reduction projects funded through the Nature Smart Climate Solutions Fund. These projects will aim to fight climate change in Manitoba while benefiting biodiversity by safeguarding carbon-rich ecosystems from destruction to keep carbon in the ground… Canada is investing heavily in nature-based climate solutions that restore degraded ecosystems, create new protected areas, improve land management practices, and plant two billion new trees. 

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Nature group advises caution around Vancouver Island’s migrating toadlets

By Jessica Durling
North Island Gazette
July 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

It’s the time of the year when the sun shines, the flowers bloom, and young western toads make their dangerous trek into the forest. “Be on the lookout for the wonderful little local amphibians, the western toad…” advised Doug Fraser, president of Nature Nanaimo. “I think a lot of people mistakenly associate frogs with water, and while it is true all of our frogs lay their eggs and develop in the water as tadpoles, many of them live in the forests.” Western toads are a species of concern due to habitat loss. Once a year, during spring, they travel to wetlands with shallow, sandy bottoms to lay their eggs. When the eggs hatch, hundreds to thousands of small black tadpoles swim together, feeding on aquatic plants, until their metamorphosis into toadlets is complete. Then, during a brief time frame sometime in July or August, the toads make the treacherous journey into the forest.

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Wildfire danger rises to ‘extreme’ on south Island

By Jeff Bell
Victoria Times Colonist
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

It didn’t take many hot July days to dry out the forest floor on southern Vancouver Island enough to trigger an “extreme” fire-danger rating. And the recent spate of hot weather is not expected to end any time soon in Greater Victoria and other Island communities. “It’s going to keep drying out those forest fuels and it’s going to get them really susceptible to ignition,” said Sam Bellion, information officer for the Coastal Fire Centre. Bellion said the extreme fire-danger rating is in effect from Victoria to Shawnigan Lake, and from the Hillbank area of Duncan to Nanaimo — including Gabriola Island. Most of the rest of the Island is rated “high” for fire danger, and that won’t change without a good dousing of rain, Bellion said. Colwood Fire Rescue Assistant Chief Greg Chow said the public needs to be aware of the extreme fire danger…

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Federal government officially identifies spotted owl habitat near Hope

By Kermone Moodley
Victoria News
July 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

It’s another landmark moment for champions of conservation and the B.C.’s northern spotted owl. A month after Justice Yvan Roy ruled that Environment Minister Stephen Guilbeault broke the law, the federal government released an updated version of their spotted owl’s recovery strategy plan that identifies the species’ critical habitat for the first time. Specifically, the new plan identifies that over 400,000 hectares of land in B.C. is critical habitat for the spotted owl.This includes two watersheds within Spuzzum Nation territory along the lower Fraser Canyon, near Hope and Boston Bar. …While news of the critical habitat identification is being being welcomed by all groups, both Ecojustice and Wilderness Committee stress that “immediate on-the-ground action is required.” They also said that waiting another five years is unacceptable and all logging must end immediately in the owl’s habitat while recovery plans are further developed.

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Time to come together on B.C. forestry

Resource Works
July 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The last time we took a deep look at the forest industry in BC, in May, we noted, “At this point, the outlook of BC’s forest sector is full of red ink and red flags,” and,“The current policy environment has been anything but stable and anything but clear.” We went on to note that Premier David Eby had appointed Langley MLA Andrew Mercier as Minister of State for Sustainable Forestry Innovation. Mercier’s official mandate letter from the Premier spells out that there is a need to increase fibre supply, aimed at keeping people working and local operations running, while also mitigating wildfire risks and reducing climate emissions. So what’s been happening?

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City of Vancouver faces lawsuit over Stanley Park tree-cutting

By Akshay Kulkarni
CBC News
July 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

The City of Vancouver and a contractor are facing a lawsuit by advocates over a plan that would see up to a third of the trees in Stanley Park cut down. The city’s park board had begun cutting down thousands of trees last summer in a bid to mitigate what it said was “imminent” fire and public safety risks posed by dead and dying trees that were affected by a Western hemlock looper moth infestation. …However, four advocates from the Stanley Park Preservation Society say the park board’s plan is not backed up by science and was pushed through without appropriate consultation. They have filed a lawsuit in B.C. Supreme Court alleging the city and its contractor B.A. Blackwell & Associates was negligent in going ahead with the tree-cutting plan. …The city states that they have planted over 25,000 seedlings in the park comprising a variety of species, as part of their reforestation efforts.

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BC First Nations Forestry Council Newsletter

BC First Nations Forestry Council
July 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

CEO Letter: The First Nations Forestry Council and all our Nations continue to work towards being full participants in all facets of forestry, and we are making progress by being in the rooms and sitting at the tables. We attended some excellent conferences and want to acknowledge the efforts of all the organizations to showcase First Nations content, highlighting both successes and challenges. Through these interactions, we are developing stronger relationships that allow us to have hard conversations. I see that we are not just saying we will work together, but we are all at the table, truly collaborating to develop shared decisions. 

Other stories include:

  • 2024 BC First Nations Forestry Conference Feedback
  • Thank you to all who attended the 2024 BC First Nations Forestry Conference!
  • First Annual Youth Forestry Conference a Success
  • First Annual Youth Forestry Conference a Success

 

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No campfires allowed in Banff as Parks Canada issues fire ban

By Brendan Ellis
CTV News
July 12, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Drought-like conditions in Banff National Park have led to a fire ban being issued – meaning no campfires starting on Saturday. Lighting or maintaining fires is prohibited in the park effective July 13 at 12:01 a.m., Parks Canada announced in a news release Friday. The ban includes all front and backcountry campgrounds. “After several days of hot, dry weather, Banff is experiencing drought-like conditions,” Parks Canada said. “This fire ban is to ensure the safety of visitors, and residents, and for the protection of park infrastructure.” …While naturally occurring wildfires, like ones caused by lightning strikes, cannot be avoided, Parks Canada asked everyone to do their part to prevent human-caused fires. …Earlier this week, Alberta Wildfire announced a fire ban for the entirety of the province’s Forest Protection Area.

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Guilbeault goes to battle with another province. This time Quebec, and it’s over caribou

By Antoine Trépanier
Canadian Press in the National Post
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Steven Guilbeault

Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault has found himself in another spat with a province. For months, Guilbeault has been demanding Quebec adopt a new plan to protect the province’s woodland caribou from the impact of logging for industrial activities and road-network expansions, as herd numbers in the province appear to be dwindling. Now the federal minister is going over the province’s head, with an emergency decree ordering his own plan, outraging Quebec’s provincial government and the Bloc Québécois. …The emergency order, which could be implemented in August, is still at the consultation stage. If Quebec presents a new plan soon, Guilbeault says he will back down. …“Considering all the efforts made in recent years, the Quebec government considers the adoption of an emergency decree unjustified,” said a statement from Charette’s office. Quebec’s Forest Industry Council’s Jean-François Samray, said that if the decree is adopted, the industry could lose 6,500 jobs.

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Canada and New Brunswick to Plant Over 52 Million Climate-Resilient Trees

By Natural Resources Canada
Cision Newswire
July 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

MONCTON, NB – Forests and trees capturing and storing carbon, offer habitats for wildlife, mitigate hot weather in cities and towns, ensure clean water and soil, and deliver essential spiritual, cultural and recreational benefits to Canadians from coast to coast. By planting two billion trees over a decade, the Government of Canada is taking a significant step forward in our country’s approach to tackling the dual crises of climate change and biodiversity decline. …Together, the Government of Canada and the Government of New Brunswick will provide more than $71 million to support progressive tree planting in New Brunswick, ensuring the right trees are planted in the right places so that the province’s forests can thrive in a changing climate. With this investment, the Province of New Brunswick aims to plant over 52 million climate-resilient trees on publicly managed land: the equivalent of planting over 60 trees for each resident of New Brunswick.

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Ottawa’s plan to protect caribou would cut Quebec’s forestry land by 4%: report

By Stéphane Blais
Canadian Press in the Montreal Gazette
July 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada East

Quebec’s forestry potential would decrease by 1.4 million cubic metres of wood per year in the three zones where an emergency decree would be imposed to protect the caribou, according to Quebec’s chief forester. At the provincial level, the decree would cause a drop of 4.1 per cent in the allowable area. This is the conclusion reached by Quebec’s chief forester, Louis Pelletier, in an analysis he presented to the Quebec government published Tuesday. As part of this analysis, the mandate of the chief forester did not include making recommendations, but was limited to informing the ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry. Nor did Pelletier have the mandate to estimate the consequences on jobs in the forestry industry. Logging companies that cut trees in caribou habitat in the Pipmuacan area would suffer the greatest impact if the decree comes to fruition.

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More than 1 trillion microbes live inside the average tree trunk

By Erik Stokstad
Science: American Association for the Advancement of Science
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

The wood inside the average tree might seem barren, but it’s home to an incredibly diverse array of life. More than 1 trillion fungi, bacteria, and other microbes live inside the average trunk, according to the most comprehensive survey yet conducted, comprising unique communities specialized to various tree species. …Microbes are an important part of plant life. Fungi in the soil help roots access water and nutrients, for example, and beneficial bacteria and fungi on leaves can prevent infection by harmful fungi or bacteria. But little is known about the microbes living inside healthy wood, which makes up a huge amount of biomass. The estimated 10 trillion trees on the planet contain 450 gigatons of carbon, dwarfing the 2 gigatons found in animals. …Ultimately, researchers might find ways to adjust the microbiome in trees to help protect them from pathogens.

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Space mission that maps forests in 3D makes an early comeback

By Abhishyant Kidangoor
Mongabay
July 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Call it the force’s doing, but it has been surprises galore for the GEDI mission. In early 2023, the lidar mission that maps the Earth’s forests in 3D was to be burned up in the atmosphere to make way for another unrelated mission on the International Space Station. A last-minute decision by NASA saved its life and put it on hiatus until October 2024. Earlier this year, another surprise revealed itself: the mission that replaced GEDI was done with its work, effectively allowing GEDI to get back to work six months earlier than expected. That’s how, in April, a robotic arm ended up moving the GEDI mission (short for Global Ecosystem Dynamics Investigation and pronounced “Jedi” like in the Star Wars films) from storage on the ISS to its original location, from where it now continues to gather crucial data on aboveground biomass on Earth.

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What the MoU between the American Loggers Council and the USDA Forest Service means for forest industry

By Mike Albrecht, president,American Loggers Council
Woodworking Network
July 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

Mike Albrecht

On May 16, 2024, I had the honor to cosign, along with Forest Service chief, Randy Moore, a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the American Loggers Council (ALC) and the USDA Forest Service. Initiated by the Forest Service, this MOU was fully endorsed by the American Loggers Council Board of Directors at the Spring Meeting. Our ALC executive director, Scott Dane, deserves credit for steering this MOU effort, working with Forest Service staff through sessions of editing and compromise. The final document is titled, “American Loggers Council and USDA Forest Service Collaborative Efforts for Healthy Forests, Markets, and Logging Industry.” …We are now encouraged and expected to work collaboratively to produce healthy forests, healthy timber markets, and a healthy logging industry. …but a final step is required to make the MOU more than three holes punched into a binder. It needs to be circulated, read, and understood.

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Scientists use machine learning to predict diversity of tree species in forests

By Public Library of Science
Phys.Org
July 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States

A collaborative team of researchers led by Ben Weinstein of the University of Florida, Oregon, US, used machine learning to generate highly detailed maps of over 100 million individual trees from 24 sites across the U.S., and published their findings July 16 in the open-access journal PLOS Biology. These maps provide information about individual tree species and conditions, which can greatly aid conservation efforts and other ecological projects. …To generate large and highly detailed forest maps, the researchers trained a type of machine learning algorithm called a deep neural network using images of the tree canopy and other sensor data taken by plane. …The deep neural network was able to classify most common tree species with 75 to 85% accuracy. Additionally, the algorithm could also provide other important analyses, such as reporting which trees are alive or dead.

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Forest restoration efforts pay off

By Peter Aleshire
White Mountain Independent
July 20, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

ARIZONA—Navajo County last week celebrated hard won gains in the decade-long effort to protect fire-prone communities. An effort to save the timber industry in the White Mountains and thin overgrown forests has doubled the annual acres thinned while skirting the edge of financial disaster, government relations director Rochelle Lacapa told the supervisors at its last meeting. Navajo County Supervisor Jason Whiting currently heads the Northern Arizona Counties Association, which has taken the lead in saving the struggling timber industry and keeping forest-restoration efforts alive. The Apache Sitgreaves National Forests now hand out contracts for thinning projects in the White Mountains that cover about 16,000 acres annually. A decade ago, the White Mountains Stewardship Program managed to thin about 8,000 acres per year, while receiving a Forest Service subsidy of about $3,000 to $5,000 per acre. That effort is widely credited with saving Alpine and perhaps Springerville from the Wallow Fire.

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Nearly half a million ‘invasive’ owls, including their hybrid offspring, to be killed in the United States

By Harry Baker
Live Science
July 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: US West, International

U.S. wildlife officials plan to kill nearly half a million “invasive” barred owls (Strix varia) over three decades, new documents confirm. Experts say the cull is needed to help protect the native northern spotted owls (Strix occidentalis caurina) and California spotted owls (Strix occidentalis occidentalis), which have been put under threat from the invaders. However, animal rights activists have condemned the plan as cruel and unnecessary. Barred owls are large and native to eastern North America. In the early 20th century, these owls started moving west of the Mississippi River… As a result, the owls have gained a stronghold in Washington, Oregon and California, where they are considered an invasive species. The arrival of barred owls in the Northwest has adversely affected the two native owl species that have also been impacted by logging activity over the last few decades, which has majorly reduced their range.

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Daltons named tree farmers of the year in Oregon

The Polk County Itemizer-Observer
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Jock and Pam Dalton

Pam and Jock Dalton of Polk County have been selected Oregon’s Outstanding Tree Farmers of the Year for 2024. The Oregon Tree Farm System (OTFS) presented the award at the Oregon Family Forest Convention in June. …Pam Dalton has deep roots on the family’s 700+ acre tree farm near Dallas. The farm has been in her family since 1917. Jock plays an integral role in actively managing the forest with Pam. The Oregon Tree Farm System emphasizes the values of wood, water, wildlife, and recreation. Pam and Jock epitomize the attention tree farmers give to the sustainability of all four values. …The Daltons harvest timber and replant, as well as promoting forest health and growth through a pre-commercial and commercial thinning regime. …For 58 years, the Oregon Tree Farm System has recognized family forest landowners who provide forest benefits and products using sound forestry management.

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Bitterroot National Forest – Fire Danger Raised to Extreme

By Alexandra Stuart, Forest Service
The US Department of Agriculture
July 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Hamilton, Montana — Just days after going to “Very High” fire danger, the Bitterroot National Forest announced today that it is raising its fire danger level to “Extreme” and will go into Stage 2 fire restrictions starting Friday, July 19, due to continued hot weather and record dry fuel conditions. Extreme is the highest fire danger level possible.  When fire danger is “Extreme,” fires start quickly, spread furiously, and burns intensely.  All fires are potentially serious and development into high intensity burning will be faster and occur even on smaller fires.  Direct attack – fire fighters using direct methods to suppress a fire – is rarely possible and may be dangerous except immediately after ignition. … Forest officials are asking the public to be especially careful when camping and visiting the forest.

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Oregon releases new draft wildfire hazard map

By April Ehrlich
Oregon Public Broadcasting
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

Oregon State University and the Oregon Department of Forestry will release the proposed wildfire hazard map at 8 a.m. Thursday. There, Oregonians can look up specific tax lots to see how susceptible they are to wildfires. This is Oregon’s second attempt at creating a wildfire map. State fire officials and OSU first released a map in 2022 under a tight one-year deadline set by Senate Bill 762. That first iteration received intense public backlash, particularly from property owners concerned it would affect their homeowners’ insurance. The state ultimately rescinded it. ….Once the map is finalized in October, the state’s Building Code Division will begin its administrative process for creating new building codes, and the Oregon State Fire Marshal will begin creating rules for defensible space. Both processes will have opportunities for public comment.

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California’s wildfires are burning far more land so far this year than in 2023

By Ayana Archie
NPR – National Public Radio
July 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

So far in this year’s California’s wildfire season, about 20 times more acres of land have burned than around this time last year. Since the beginning of the year, there were more than 3,500 wildfires across the state through early July, causing about 207,000 acres of land to burn. Around this time last year, about 10,000 acres had burned. The five-year average of acres burned through mid-July is about 39,000, Cal Fire said last week. “We are not just in a fire season, but we are in a fire year,” Joe Tyler, director of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire), said at a news conference earlier in July. …As part of its 2024 budget, California will allocate $2.6 billion through 2028 to fighting wildfires and improving forest health, in addition to $200 million annually to help prevent fires. 

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Waldport says it will test city water and monitor herbicide spraying on 110-acre Weyerhaeuser clearcut

By Garret Jaros
Yachats News
July 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

WALDPORT, Oregon – A plan to spray herbicides on a Weyerhaeuser clearcut near one of Waldport’s municipal water sources has drawn condemnation by people who oppose the practice and triggered city officials to take precautionary measures. City officials have not yet been notified when ground spraying on the 110-acre “Pankey Pit” clearcut located immediately east of Waldport on Mount Eckman will begin, the 14-day public comment period required before any action ends Wednesday. …The City’s plan includes having an observer on site during the spray, shutting down the water intake for 72 hours and conducting water tests to determine if any contaminates exist. …“This is out of an abundance of caution,” city manager Dann Cutter told YachatsNews. “We will be on site and monitoring, but only a very narrow portion of the logged area falls into the watershed above our intake. Their mapping shows a significant buffer zone.”

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Prescribed Fires Enhance Forest Resilience

By Brent Skaggs and Craig Thomas, The Fire Restoration Group
The Nevada Globe
July 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US West

This opinion editorial is a rebuttal toBurn Back Better? USFS Chief’s Letter Of Intent Provokes Revolt In The Firefighting CommunityOne of the best methods for reducing the impact of wildfires is to reduce the number of trees per acre by thinning the larger trees and following up with prescribed fire, to enhance forest resilience, by removing surplus smaller trees that act as ladder fuels and potentially killing the larger trees in a wildfire. …Let’s … support the Forest Service when in “Full Suppression” mode and when implementing fuels treatment projects. We need to armor against the uninformed individuals who throw rocks and promote untrue and misleading characterizations of fuels treatments the Forest Service has accomplished using beneficial fire. It is time we push back and use all our collective influence to cooperatively work together and with the Fire and Smoke Management Agencies to reduce the flammability of California’s and Nevada’s fire-prone landscapes.

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Genome study informs restoration of American chestnut tree

By Lindsey Byars
Virginia Tech News
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Native trees adapt to the climate and environmental conditions of their area to survive. Researchers in the College of Natural Resources and Environment in collaboration with the American Chestnut Foundation confirmed this by examining the genome of American chestnut trees sampled throughout the Appalachian Mountain range and grouping the samples according to their specific environmental region. The research …has the potential to help restore the American chestnut population and adjust breeding to the changing climate. …Fungal blight decimated the American chestnut tree in the early 20th century, altering the life cycle of the species native to the Appalachian Mountain region. Because of chronic fungal blight infections, the species is unable to reproduce, migrate, or evolve in response to climate change. The American Chestnut Foundation has spent the last 40-years creating a genetically modified, blight-resistant species, but adaptive diversity has not been a focus until now.

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Q&A with Michael Blazier, Dean of the University of Arkansas at Monticello College of Forestry

By Mark Carter
Arkansas Money and Politics
July 18, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Michael Blazier

The college of forestry, agriculture and natural resources at the University of Arkansas at Monticello is the only school of its kind in the state. The college includes the Arkansas Center for Forest Business and the Arkansas Forest Resources Center, part of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture and a UA System Center of Excellence, as well as the system’s spatial analysis lab. The college will soon add the Arkansas Forest Health Research Center. Michael Blazier is the dean of the UAM forestry college and serves as director of the Arkansas Forest Resources Center on the Monticello campus. While much attention in recent years has been devoted to two-year workforce development programs that deliver higher-than-average starting salaries, Blazier oversees programs that are churning out foresters, conservationists, food scientists and others who make roughly twice the median household income in Arkansas.

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Surging Deer Populations Are a Crisis for Eastern Forests

By Ashley Stimpson
Audubon Magazine
July 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Important habitats for many bird species ‘are in imminent danger of collapse,’ one expert warns, and the federal government may need to step in. …White-tailed deer are the most widespread and familiar deer species in the United States. While conversations about their overabundance typically center around suburban landscapes, there’s growing recognition that too many deer can jeopardize the health of forests, too. They provide easy transportation for invasive species and disease-carrying ticks, and their prodigious munching reduces the forest’s ability to store carbon. More worryingly, overbrowsing decimates the shrubby understory and prevents seedlings from growing into new trees, threatening the future of the forest itself. Not just the plants suffer; so does every creature that relies on them. One study in Pennsylvania found that when high densities of deer roamed a forest, the abundance and diversity of birds that use midstory vegetation plunged by 37 percent and 27 percent, respectively.

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Arkansas Game and Fish Commission forest management earns high marks in independent audit

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission
July 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas — On the surface, cutting trees to make more trees may sound a bit counterintuitive, but that’s exactly what the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is doing, and according to the results of a recent audit, it’s just the right medicine for some of the forests under the AGFC’s care. The audit was completed… to ensure the AGFC’s forestry practices stayed within the updated Sustainable Forestry Initiative® standards set in 2022. Not only did all conditions continue to meet or exceed the new standards in the 2024 audit, but the AGFC’s work in greentree reservoir management and improving the health of the forest associated with GTRs earned the issuance of a notable practice indicator during the audit. …The AGFC is responsible for 365,000 acres of land in Arkansas, 295,000 of which is forested and included in the SFI program. During the last five years only 5,982 of those acres have seen harvests.

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Indigenous knowledge plays critical role in securing resilience of Minnesota forests

By Keith Karnes, Division of Resource Management Forestry Director
The Bemidji Pioneer
July 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

The Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe shares more boundaries with the National Forest System than any other tribe, with 75% of the reservation border adjoining the Chippewa National Forest in northern Minnesota. Being in the Northwoods, timber harvesting and forest management are important to the tribe’s economy. …Forests also provide them with a deep cultural foundation… However, forest health has declined rapidly over the past two centuries. Clear-cut logging by European settlers combined with a management legacy of fire suppression and the impacts of climate change are increasingly exposing our forests to risks from severe wildfire, insects and disease and drought. …the U.S. Forest Service is exploring ways to restore old-growth forests … and strengthen forest resilience by incorporating Indigenous knowledge. Contrary to myths of “virgin” forests when Europeans first arrived on this continent, the evidence is clear that forests were actively taken care of by Indigenous people for thousands of generations. 

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Forest Products EXPO 2025 Early-Bird Pricing Ends July 19!

Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition
July 16, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

Exhibit space reservations for the 38th Forest Products Machinery & Equipment Exposition (EXPO 2025), presented by the Southern Forest Products Association, are outpacing the previous show – with more than 62% of the floor plan under contract or pending as of June 24. We are well on our way to surpass the 217 exhibitors from 2023, which was a record number last reached in 2007. But there are still some great spaces available for you! SFPA associate member exhibitors and EXPO 2023 returning exhibiting companies receive discounted exhibit space rates for applications received before July 19, 2024. The three-day biannual tradeshow, to be held August 6-8, 2025, will return to the Music City Center in Nashville and provide attendees with solutions for nearly every stage of manufacturing. From raw material handling to crane operations; metal detection and scanning technologies; log optimization, drying, grading, sorting, packaging, and distribution, customers new and old will be waiting to explore these solutions with you face to face.

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Discovery of a hybrid lineage offers clues to how trees adapt to climate change

By Jeff Mulhollem
Penn State News
July 15, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: United States, US East

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The discovery of a hybrid population of poplar trees in western Wyoming has provided insight into how natural hybridization informs the evolution of many plant species, according to a team led by Penn State researchers. They suggest that genetic exchange between species may be critical for adaptation to environmental change. The research is the latest study to suggest that natural hybridization has played an important role in the evolution of many plant species, according to team leader Jill Hamilton, associate professor in Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences. “Hybridization between different species is occurring in nature far more frequently than we might have thought — particularly in forest trees. This is not necessarily a bad thing, because it may be a natural mechanism to facilitate adaptation in a changing climate,” said Hamilton, who is director of the Schatz Center for Tree Molecular Genetics at Penn State.

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Brazil to allow miles of selective logging in effort to preserve the Amazon

By Fabiano Maisonnave
The Associated Press
July 23, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

To combat ongoing destruction in the Amazon rainforest, Brazil announced a plan to dramatically expand selective logging over the next two years. In Brazil, vast forest lands are designated as public yet have no special protection or enforcement and are vulnerable to land grabbing and illegal deforestation. …“The main goal of forest concessions is the conservation of these areas,” said Renato Rosenberg, director of forest concessions. “They also create jobs and income in parts of the Amazon that would otherwise have little economic activity.” Companies that get timber concessions have to follow strict rules. They can log up to six trees per hectare over a 30-year period. Protected species, such as Brazil nut, and older, seed-producing trees are off limits. …The idea is that granting permission to timber companies to take a limited number of trees gives them a stake in overseeing the forest, something the Brazilian government cannot afford to do.

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‘Cutest animal in Australia’: keeping watch over greater gliders in a forest targeted for logging

By Lisa Cox
The Guardian
July 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

…It’s a Sunday in July, just after sunset. We’re sitting in the Bulga state forest, inland from Port Macquarie on the New South Wales mid-north coast, waiting for darkness to fall. Six of us, including the independent MP for Mackellar, Sophie Scamps, are huddled, focused on a single tree. …This environmental neighbourhood watch has become routine in the forest of the Bulga plateau. It is how members of the group hope they might save the area from logging by the state-owned NSW Forestry Corporation, which is scheduled to recommence as soon as the first week of August. Citizen scientists have spent many nights over the past year spotlighting in parts of the forest scheduled for logging. They register every greater glider den tree they observe on the state government’s biodiversity database, BioNet. …Unlike Victoria and Western Australia, which have ended native forestry operations, the Minns government has not.

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Forests face increasing climate-related stress amid growing demand for their products, FAO report warns

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
July 22, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

ROME – Climate change is increasing the susceptibility of the world’s forests to stressors such as wildfires and pests, according to a new flagship publication by the FAO of the United Nations that emphasizes the role of innovation in achieving a sustainable future for the forestry sector. The State of the World’s Forests 2024 report was released on Monday at the 27th session of the Committee on Forestry. The report says there’s evidence to suggest that climate change is making forests more vulnerable to stressors such as wildfires and pests. …Climate change also makes forests more vulnerable to invasive species, with insects, pests and disease pathogens threatening tree growth and survival. …Global wood production, meanwhile, remains at record levels. After a brief dip during the COVID-19 pandemic, production is back at about 4 billion cubic meters yearly. The report argues that forest-sector innovation is a crucial enabler of progress towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.

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Forests continue to capture carbon despite challenges

Leeds University
July 17, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: International

The world’s forests have absorbed more than 100 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide over the past three decades, but they need more protection, according to a new study. Professors Oliver Phillips and Simon Lewis from the School of Geography contributed to the tropical component of the global study, which assessed how the most carbon-rich, species-rich forests have responded to climate change and other threats since 1990. The study, entitled “The enduring world forest carbon sink,” is published in Nature. It combined long-term ground measurements with remote sensing data to measure the volume of carbon dioxide absorbed by forests across the world. The results showed that forests have absorbed more than 100 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide over the past 30 years, nearly half of the carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels over the same period. However, they are facing threats from deforestation and wildfires. This study makes recommendations for their protection and restoration.

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