Seeing the forest through the dead trees at Stanley Park

By Marsha Lederman
The Globe and Mail
September 19, 2024
Category: Forestry
Region: Canada, Canada West

Stanley Park is an urban forest abutting downtown Vancouver… But parts of the park are being logged because of an outbreak of the hemlock looper moth. A report delivered to the Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation in January by B.A. Blackwell and Associates, a forestry consulting firm, found that about 30 per cent of the trees in the park that are more than 20 centimetres in diameter had been killed by the endemic insect – approximately 20,410 trees. Another 36 per cent have experienced moderate defoliation and need to be monitored. …Two months earlier, the Park Board had announced the “urgent removal” of approximately 160,000 trees from Stanley Park as a result of the outbreak. …Not everyone is convinced. Vancouver resident Michael Caditz went to court this week to try to get an interlocutory injunction to prevent further tree removals. …In a video, Caditz calls the city’s response a “one-opinion process”. He is also for a public investigation. [A Globe and Mail subscription is required to access this full story]

Read More