Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

133 - Earth’s Tree News

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Today for you 39 news items about Mama Earth's trees. Location, number

and subject listed below. Condensed / abbreviated article is listed

further below. --British

Columbia: 1) Marbled Murrelet research, 2) stewardship plan in East

Canoe creek, 3) compliance and enforcement staffer confided to me, 4)

Island Timberlands will begin logging private lands in Ucluelet-Tofino,

5) Gov tries to get Betty in court, 6) Betty replies to court charade,

7) Teck Cominco to protect 2,200 acres in Trail, 8) GBR agreement about

to be violated, 9) Spirit Bear Youth Coalition to attack government

with cartoon characters, --Washington: 10) Marbled Murrelet research--Oregon:

11) Mount Ashland Ski Area expansion wins in court, 12) New strategies

to close FS facilities, 13) First Appeal filed in roadless ruling,--California: 14) Editorial against HR 4200--Idaho: 15) Idaho Gov. Jim Risch fails to upstage roadless ruling--Colorado: 16) bristlecone pine, 17) artworks depict how different species relate

--New Mexico: 18) Lawsuit against a 2,282-acre project--Michigan: 19) Flying trees for stream protection--New Jersey: 20) Ruth Fisher fights for dead trees for woodpeckers--Vermont: 21) Legacy of red pine falls to the saws, --Maryland: 22) Chesapeake Bay watershed is losing 100 acres of trees every day--Massachusetts: 23) Nine new large and many smaller forest reserves --North Carolina: 24) Logging to beat new Woodpecker restrictions

--Maine: 25) Plum Creek fiasco, 26) Plum Creek fiasco #2--Canada: 27) Start of the National Forest Congress, 28) Boreal's value as a reservoir,--Finland: 29) Held accountable for Russia's illegal logging--Palestine: 30) Israeli bulldozers clear old trees

--Russia: 31) Shortage of raw material in Russia?--Madagascar: 32) Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden--Malaysia: 33) Gvernment will continue to keep a close watch over the theft of logs --New Zealand: 34) New Zealand's richest man has pulled the plug on conservation

--Australia:

35) Save Arcadia Forest changes direction, 36) 2.5 million trees will

be planted along River Murray, 37) Resorting to extreme tactics, --World

wide: 38) Deforestation Diesel, 39) Deserts are on the march along with

deforestation and biofuels are more of the problem not the solution.British Columbia:1)

VANCOUVER Ms. Chatwinm a rare- and endangered-species biologist for the

provincial government on Vancouver Island, is doing one of the most

difficult wildlife-protection jobs on the West Coast. She and other

members of the British Columbia Marbled Murrelet Recovery Team are

mapping the nesting sites of an endangered bird that simply doesn't

want to be found, in order to help protect the sites from logging. For

a century on the Pacific Coast, researchers hunted in vain for the

nests of marbled murrelets. They did not find the first one until 1990,

when an egg was located in a small mossy indentation 50 metres up in an

old-growth tree on southern Vancouver Island. Many more have been found

since then, but for the past decade, working with scanty information

about where the birds might nest, the provincial government has been

setting aside small areas of old-growth forest in the hope of saving

marbled murrelet habitat. Without hard evidence to back up their

choices, there was always concern that the areas being protected

weren't actually being used by the birds, which nest by simply settling

down on thick pads of moss on branches high in the forest canopy. But

this summer Ms. Chatwin and the other members of the recovery team got

a boost when a U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service study in

Washington tagged about 40 marbled murrelets, caught in Juan de Fuca

Strait, and tracked two of them back to near Port Renfrew on southern

Vancouver Island. One of the birds was found nesting in a protected

wildlife habitat area at Fairy Creek, and the other was just outside a

habitat area at Hemmingsen Creek that can be expanded to include the

nesting tree. " We were thrilled, " Ms. Chatwin said yesterday. " There

are only nine wildlife habitat areas in that timber supply area [on

southern Vancouver Island near Carmanah Valley]. To have two of them

now confirmed as nesting sites is a real validation of the work we've

been doing. " Researchers had long observed murrelets feeding at sea.

They always lost the birds, which take to the air just before nightfall

to fly on small, rapidly beating wings deep into the woods where they

vanish into the lush, coastal rain forest. " They are extremely

difficult to find because their whole lifestyle is set up to avoid

predation, " Ms. Chatwin said. " They come out of the forest early in the

morning, just before dawn, and fly out to sea to feed. They don't come

back until just at dusk. They take on a brown [camouflaged] colouring

during nesting season. And they are very quiet. They are just a

secretive bird. " http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060923.BCBIRD23/TPStory/National2)

Attending the meeting was Federated's planning forester Greg Hislop,

who explained the reason for the referral to the city. " The stewardship

plan is of course a planning mechanism that the province has come up

with for Crown forests, " said Hislop. " The next step would be a cutting

permit. It used to be we'd have a forest development plan in place and

then we'd create applications to amend certain blocks in. Now it's more

we focus on results and strategies towards objectives by government. "

Forest stewardship plans must be made available by forest licensees in

advance to First Nations and resource users for review, and comment.

They are a part of the Forest and Range Practices Act, designed,

according to the Ministry of Forest and Range, to " avoid overlap with

other statutes such as the Heritage Conservation Act an the Drinking

Water Protection Act. " Hislop noted that of the watershed's 1,985

hectares, Federated - if it proceeds with a cutting permit - would only

be looking at two per cent or 35 hectares for harvest. " We want to be

open and proactive with anything we do in that area, " said Hislop. With

appreciation for Hislop's presence and openness, council approved

Paiement's recommendation for ongoing consultation between the city and

Federated. http://www.saobserver.net/portals-code/list.cgi?paper=29 & cat=23 & id=733855 & more=3)

B.C. government compliance and enforcement staffer confided to me the

other day about the sad state of current forest management. " They have

legislated us out of the bush, " he complained. " Companies are

controlling prices and are bullies in the forests. " He had heard that

his union was going to do a survey to determine the level of job

satisfaction under the province's Forest and Range Practices Act

(FRPA), but then survey was mysteriously canned. He does not know

anyone that is satisfied, " except the managers. " Essentially, he said,

some companies are " running amok. " His views coincide with another

consulting forester who was once a major licensee woods manager, but

now doesn't like to look anymore when he is out in the field. No

wonder, as he now sees a management style similar to the 1970s, with

openings that are too large, cut block boundaries that are too close in

proximity to other blocks, improper riparian management, too much

waste, and a lack of attention to visual quality. Although profits are

finally falling for the industries because of the current low price of

lumber, most companies have done very well this decade. Thanks to the

provincial Liberals, logging rules are virtually non-existent and the

subsidies have been generous. The provincial government has spent

hundreds of millions of dollars buying back timber to establish its new

market-based tenure system, timber that the companies never paid for in

the first place. Another $125-million has been allocated for worker and

community adjustment programs. This is public money being used to prop

up an industry that always falsely claimed it pays for our schools and

hospitals! http://www.watershedsentinel.ca4)

Island Timberlands will begin logging its private lands in the

Ucluelet-Tofino area within four weeks, say company officials. Inside,

company representatives laid out plans to harvest 50,000 cubic metres

in 2006 and 30,000 cubic metres in 2007 from its three Clayoquot, five

Port Albion and one Toquart Bay cutblocks. "You never know how people

will react," said Diane Medves, a corporate forester for Island

Timberlands. "I think folks are glad we've offered them the

opportunity." Rod Christie, an Island Timberlands planner, said road

construction has begun in five of the cutblocks and harvesting will

begin in about four weeks. He said the company will meet the Forest and

Range Practices Act. In at least one Port Albion cutblock, Ucluelet

residents will notice some disturbance to the forest's canopy. Eric

Russcher said he's skeptical about the plans. "If you take them at face

value, it's going to be a good project." Russcher said he feels

"uncomfortable" because logging will take place on private lands, lands

not protected in the same manner as Crown lands. "Overall, it makes me

nervous." Maryjka Mychajlowycz, forest-watch coordinator for the

Friends of Clayoquot Sound, said she's still skeptical – even though

the plans look good on the site level. "What's in the plans is not

necessarily what you're going to get." She said the company should not

be operating at all. "They're clearing out the last fragments of old

growth." Mychajlowycz said too little notice was given for the public

meeting. "It's so last minute, so poorly advertised. It's amazing

anybody was there." http://www.westcoaster.ca/modules/AMS/article.php?storyid=11845)

The Crown is using television news reports of the Eagleridge Bluffs

protests as a key part of its case in the criminal contempt prosecution

of Betty Krawczyk. Excerpts from reports by CTV News and Global

Television about an enforcement order obtained by the contractor of the

Sea-to-Sky Highway, which required protesters to leave the area, were

played in B.C. Supreme Court yesterday. The reports feature comments by

Ms. Krawczyk as she is speaking to members of the West Vancouver Police

Department, which were recorded by the news media. The 78-year-old

great-grandmother is heard telling one officer to leave the area and

another that she expected to be arrested. The noted environmental

protester was arrested on May 25, along with more than 20 others who

refused to comply with the enforcement order. Ms. Krawczyk is on trial

on a charge of criminal contempt because she was arrested three times

this spring for refusing to abide by the enforcement order to stay away

from the construction area. If ultimately convicted of criminal

contempt, she could be sentenced to more than a year in jail in the

judge-alone trial presided over by Madam Justice Brenda Brown. The

rarely prosecuted charge requires the Crown to prove that a defendant

defied a court order " in a public way, " with the intent to " depreciate

the authority of the court, " according to the leading Supreme Court of

Canada ruling on the issue. There is a high burden on the Crown to

prove criminal contempt. In a notorious case in Ontario several years

ago, the provincial Court of Appeal found that a Toronto lawyer was not

guilty of contempt for saying that the courts and police appeared to be

stuck together with Krazy Glue. The news reports played yesterday by

prosecutor Mike Brundrett are part of the Crown's assertion that Ms.

Krawczyk publicly defied the civil court order to end Eagleridge

protests. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060920.BCKRAWCZYK20/TPStory/National6)

I've been in court an entire week now and the Crown hasn't yet finished

their case against me.They have lots of police officers to get through

on the stand (arresting officers who have to be examined and cross

examined) lots of newspaper clippings, lots of video to be shown. But I

think next Tuesday may be the last day of the Crown's case (there is no

court on Monday for me) and then Cameron Ward, my lawyer, will start to

present my defense, perhaps by Tuesday afternoon. Not that I have a

defense. Not really. Not according to signals from Madam Justice Brown.

She will only consider if I broke the injunction at Eagleridge Bluffs

(she knows I did, everybody knows I did, my God, how could anybody in

the court room have missed it?) and will not consider my motives,

whatever they may be. Furthermore, she will not listen to legal

argument (in any substantive way) why I, as were the others, arrested

under a ruling where there is no defense (a ruling made especially for

citizens who actually think there is such a thing as participatory

democracy) instead of under the Criminal Code where we would have a

defense as she would then have to take motive into consideration. Just

think, under the criminal code we could actually talk about Eagleridge

Bluffs! And why we went there! And Madam Justice Brown would have to

take our motives into consideration! Because even though we are taking

up all of this court's time this is not a fair trial. Madam Justice

Brown will say it is, Crown Council Michael Brundrett will say it is,

Wally Oppal will say it is (incidentally he is being subpoenaed by us

to come to court as a witness. either he or his lawyer well also make

some kind of an appearance on Tuesday or Wednesday) all three will

point to how long the make believe trial took if asked. And by George,

according to the mountains of paper and plastic disks generated it

certainly looks like something of note might be taking place, some

serious question of justice to be solved. But don't be fooled. It's a

sham. A farce. betty_krawczyk7) TRAIL - In a move

to protect a valuable ecosystem and wildlife area, Teck Cominco Metals

Ltd. announced plans to transfer more than 2,200 acres of land in

British Columbia along the Columbia River to The Land Conservancy

(TLC). " We're very pleased to make this substantial contribution to The

Land Conservancy to protect one of the Trail region's most unique

wildlife and ecological areas, " says Mike Martin, General Manager of

Trail Operations. " Our goal was to see the Fort Shepherd lands

protected forever through a partnership with The Land Conservancy and

with the support of the Trail Wildlife Association. " Owned by Teck

Cominco Metals, the Fort Shepherd lands are located along the west bank

of the Columbia River, south of the City of Trail. Teck Cominco will be

transferring the land to the TLC at a substantial $1 million discount

below fair market value. Known as the Fort Shepherd Flats, the lands

contain a rare biogeoclimatic area unique in BC. It also contains a

number of species-at-risk including Great Blue Herons, Canyon Wrens,

Townsend's Big-Eared Bats, Racers and is valuable winter range for Mule

Deer. The land also has historical value as it was once the site of the

Hudson Bay Company's Fort Shepherd trading post from 1857-1870. For

further information: Dr. Mark Edwards, Manager - Environment, Health

& Safety, Teck Cominco Metals Ltd., Trail Operations, Tel: (250)

364-43088) Stalled commitments of the Great Bear Rainforest

Agreement: 1) The first phase of legal objectives for new logging

practices will not be in place by Sept 30; 2) The scientific oversight

group for the agreements, the EBM working group, has not yet been

formed or adequately funded, and; 3) Some forest companies still have

not begun EBM practices, agreed to in December 2003. --- Sierra Club of

Canada-BC Chapter, Greenpeace and ForestEthics call on the B.C.

government and First Nations to take immediate action to make the

commitments of the Great Bear Rainforest Agreements real on the ground.

"Collaborative, credible science got us all to the Agreement in

February and is still what is needed to secure the future of the Great

Bear Rainforest," said Lisa Matthaus, Coast Campaign Coordinator for

the Sierra Club of Canada, BC Chapter. "We agreed to a scientific

oversight group for implementation. Without this up and running,

logging decisions are being made on a piecemeal basis." A new system of

logging, to be phased in between now and 2009, was agreed to by the

logging industry, environmental organizations, communities, labour

unions, First Nations and the B.C. government. These lighter touch

practices would see more areas off limits to logging to protect old

growth, wildlife habitat, sensitive watersheds and salmon streams. "We

have a global model for the Great Bear Rainforest; now it is time for

change on the ground," said Amanda Carr, Greenpeace Forest Campaigner.

"Today, logging threatens the future of ecologically important areas

creating uncertainty in the Great Bear Rainforest – it is time to get

down to work and act on our agreements." For more information, please

contact : Amanda Carr, Greenpeace (604-839-8760) Lisa Matthaus, Sierra

Club of Canada, BC Chapter (250-888-6267) Merran Smith, ForestEthics

(604-816-5636)9) The Spirit Bear Youth Coalition will attack

the provincial government with cartoon characters if the Liberals don't

protect the white bear's stomping grounds. Yesterday, the coalition

sent out a news release urging Premier Gordon Campbell to " intervene

immediately " to stop logging in the " 80,000-hectare Green wilderness " -

which the group identifies as part of the bear's " core habitat. " But if

that doesn't happen, the Campbell administration could have a fight on

its hands in the movie theatres. The coalition is currently working to

produce The Spirit Bear Movie - a computer-animated film slated for

worldwide release in spring 2008. But the producers are prepared to

release that movie a year later - coinciding with the next election -

if the bear remains under threat. Under an agreement last February, the

Campbell administration agreed to protect large swaths of the Great

Bear Rainforest, including 200,000 hectares just for the spirit bear -

constituting two-thirds of its habitat. The Green wilderness falls

outside that protected area. http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/News/2006/09/21/1872507-sun.htmlWashington:10)

Tom Bloxton, a wildlife biologist with the USDA Forest Service, led the

research project, which attached temporary radio tags to birds captured

along Washington's Olympic Peninsula. The radio tracking devices, each

one about the size of a dime, fall off when the birds moult. Over two

years, the study found nine nests in the Olympic National Forest and

the two on Vancouver Island, leading to some rare photos of the

secretive birds. Only one nest successfully produced a chick. The

marbled murrelet is listed as " threatened " by the Committee on the

Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. The robin-sized bird's habitat

ranges from Alaska to Northern California, with an estimated 40,000 to

50,000 on the B.C. coast. http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20060923.BCBIRD23/TPStory/NationalOregon:

11)

MEDFORD — A federal judge ruled in favor of the proposed expansion of

Mount Ashland's ski area Thursday, but environmental groups say they

may appeal his decision. U.S. District Court Judge Owen Panner

supported the U.S. Forest Service and the Mount Ashland Association,

the nonprofit corporation that manages the ski area, which decided to

add 16 new trails, two new chairlifts and 200 parking spaces on the

mountain. " We're elated, " said Bill Little, president of the board of

directors of the Mount Ashland Association. The decision frustrated

environmental groups that previously sued to halt more development on

the mountain and they say they may appeal his decision and possible use

a recent decision on roadless area development in their case. " We're

considering our options, " said Tom Dimitre, chairman of the Rogue Group

Sierra Club, one of the groups that sued the U.S. Forest Service along

with Ashland-based Headwaters and Portland-based Oregon Natural

Resources Council. The expansion issue could be complicated by a

federal judge's ruling this week that restored a Clinton

administration's roadless rule that prevents logging and road building

within large blocks of undeveloped forest. The area proposed for

expansion lies within the McDonald Peak roadless area. Environmental

groups could try to use the roadless rule to oppose the ski area

expansion. Dimitre said the Mount Ashland ski area expansion threatens

logging and road building in the McDonald Peak roadless area. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/outdoors/2003271237_webskiarea22.html

12)

National forests around the region have begun unveiling new strategies

to close, shorten seasons or levy new fees at campgrounds, trailheads

and other recreation sites that they can no longer afford to maintain.

Blueprints for the Deschutes, Willamette and Umpqua national forests in

Oregon call for shutting down lesser-used campgrounds such as the Shady

Dell Campground near Oakridge and charging fees at the Clear Lake

picnic area east of Eugene. It's part of a nationwide strategy by the

U.S. Forest Service to bring its aging array of recreation facilities

into line with the shrinking pool of money it has to maintain them --

and with what the public wants. Funding for recreation sites in Oregon

and Washington has dropped from $25.7 million in fiscal 2005 to $21.9

million proposed in President Bush's 2007 budget. While the sites

targeted for closure may not be the most popular, officials acknowledge

they may include favorite out-of-the-way spots where some families have

camped for years. It reflects the hard times now faced by national

forests no longer flush with money like they had during the logging

heyday. Each national forest is ranking its recreation sites according

to factors such as how closely it fits with the forest's main

attractions. Highly ranked sites may be upgraded, while low-ranked

sites may be closed or operated for shorter periods each year. The

approach tries to do in an organized way what might otherwise happen

haphazardly when a funding crisis hits, forest officials say. http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/115899272421300.xml & coll=7

13)

PORTLAND - It's taken only one day for an appeal to be filed in the

legal fight over roadless national forests. Wednesday a federal judge

ruled that roadless forests should be protected. Ley Garnett has more.

The contract holder of two roadless timber projects in southern Oregon

has asked the Ninth US Circuit of Appeals to overturn the decision. The

Silver Creek Timber Company filed the appea,l but the company has not

stopped logging. Rolf Skar, of the conservation group the Siskiyou

Project, says the logging should halt immediately. Rolf Skar: " The

judge declared that this is illegal to enter roadless areas to do this

sort of logging. Well then, the whole project never should have

happened to begin with. So whether they're cutting or whether they're

pulling trees out with helicopters or bringing them back to the mill to

make a buck off of what is now declared illegal logging, clearly none

of that should happen. " Skar says conservationists may ask Judge

Elizabeth Laporte to clarify her decision. A spokeswoman for the

Siskiyou National Forest says the federal government believes the

timber company can continue logging. http://publicbroadcasting.net/opb/news.newsmain?action=article & ARTICLE_ID=971479 & sectionID=1

California:14)

Walk through any forest after a fire and you hear a cacophony of bird

song. Chipmunks and ground squirrels scurry into the regenerating

shrubs. Colorful wildflowers nod in the breeze. Many plants and animals

thrive in and even need burned forests for their survival. Black-backed

woodpeckers are rarely found anywhere but in the most severely burned

patches, and many plants and trees require the heat of fire to open

their seeds for germination.This is hardly surprising, since forests

and the animals and plants that live there have existed with fire for

millenniums.That's why a bill in Congress to boost logging in burned

forests is a bad idea. The logging bill, HR 4200, which passed the

House and has been referred to the Senate Agriculture Committee, would

implement a system of preapproved logging practices after natural

events such as a fire, and would exempt these practices from the

National Environmental Policy Act. NEPA is the law that requires

federal agencies to carefully examine and disclose the potential

impacts of a logging project to the public. Whenever there is fire,

drought, storm, disease, insect outbreak or other natural disturbances,

HR 4200 would eliminate Endangered Species Act protections to rush the

logging of trees. The Forest Service could proceed with a sale before

getting input from the government scientists on avoiding harm to

endangered species. In fact, timber companies would be preapproved to

kill an unlimited number of threatened and endangered species while

carrying out the logging project.These logging bills make a mockery of

the nation's long-standing efforts to recover species pushed toward

extinction. http://www.sacbee.com/110/story/27349.htmlIdaho:15)

Hours before Idaho Gov. Jim Risch held a press conference Wednesday to

unveil his petition to alter the management of Idaho's 9.3 million

acres of road-free national forest land, a federal judge in California

threw out the plan that would allow him to do so. But the governor

remained undeterred and vowed to move forward with the petition, which

was spearheaded by the Bush administration in 2004 to give states more

control of their own public lands destiny. National and local

conservation groups sent out a flurry of news releases touting the

federal ruling as a major victory for roadless lands and people who

want them to remain protected from logging, mining, excessive motorized

use and road building. Furthermore, Caswell contends that Gov. Risch's

petition does not stray much from current forest prescriptions.

Currently, Idaho's 9.32 million roadless acres are divided into three

categories: proposed wilderness (1.37 million acres); proposed

backcountry (2.28 million acres); and proposed development (5.66

million acres). Wilderness areas are under federal protection and

closed to mechanized travel. Backcountry lands do not have roads and do

not allow harvest (logging), but in some cases do allow motorized use.

Caswell said about 99 percent of the roadless acreage proposed for

development was never developed. Risch's petition breaks up the 9.3

million acres into four categories: wild land recreation (1.43 million

acres); primitive (1.68 million acres); backcountry (5.51 million

acres); and general forest (521,169 acres). Breakdown of Idaho lands ·

Size of state: 52,960,000 acres. · National Forests: 20,458,000 acres.

· Wilderness: 4,005,754 acres (fifth largest sum in United States). ·

Roadless: 9,322,000 acres (largest in Lower 48). http://www.mtexpress.com/index2.php?issue_date=09-22-2006 & ID=2005112592

Colorado:16)

The dawn air freezes all but six weeks of the year. There is no sign of

soil. But on this lonely ridge, the oldest known tree in Colorado's

Pikes Peak region, a Rocky Mountain bristlecone pine, has been growing

for 2,040 years. It probably got its start when a gray, jaylike bird

called a Clark's nutcracker hid seeds filched from a nearby pine into a

nook on the ridge, then forgot about the stash. Today, the tree's

location is known to only six people, who keep the route hidden to

protect the ancient pine. The annual rings laid down in the stout

trunk, however, are much more widely known. Decades ago, a local boy

drilled a core sample no wider than a chopstick from the tree's trunk

that revealed the rings. Since then, scores of scientists have

scrutinized the tiny dowel for insight into everything from ancient

explosions to Aztec curses to global climate change. So many have used

the pine to study the climate that it has become a sort of global black

box - a flight recorder for the past 2,000 years of Earth. For all

this, the pine doesn't look like much. It's about 15 feet tall. It has

one living branch. Twenty centuries of storms have scoured all but 7

inches of bark off the 9-foot diameter trunk. So much of the tree is

dead, gray wood that it looks a bit like a rhino wearing a wreath.

Still, like all old bristlecones, it seems to exude an enduring

nobility. " You feel like you are meeting a very important person,

perhaps someone from mythology, " writer Darwin Lambert said of old

bristlecones. At dawn on a recent morning, the first rays of light

spilled over the prairie and bathed the rocky slope where the oldest

tree stands. In the warm sunshine, its branch resumed the work passed

down from a seed 2,040 years ago: use the light, grow new needles, draw

water up from the rock.This year, the branch produced 19 cones. The

tiny seeds between the scales will probably be snatched up by a Clark's

nutcracker, or hidden in the rocks. http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctimes/news/nation/15581746.htm17)

Many of the beautiful pieces of artwork depict how different species

relate to each other and have adapted to survive in the jungle. Each

piece tells a story of rainforest life, which provides insight into how

the dynamics of the rainforest are essential to the overall health of

our planet. Pieces in the exhibit are from ten artists who have

produced a body of work of consistent quality over time. Each artist

was invited to exhibit several works to demonstrate their versatility

and range of artistic treatment. Artworks were chosen for their

assorted subject matter and for their creative combinations of elements

and principles of composition and design, extraordinary technique and

resulting style Experience the rainforest yourself from August 19

through November 19 at The Wildlife Experience. http://denver.yourhub.com/GREENWOODVILLAGE/Stories/Entertainment/Art/Story~127816.aspx

New Mexico:18)

Co-plaintiffs, Forest Guardians, Colorado Wild, Center for Native

Ecosystems, Carson Forest Watch, Randal McKown, and Gilbert and Alice

Duran, filed for a preliminary injunction to temporarily stop a large

logging project in the Rio Grande National Forest in New Mexico. The

2,282-acre project has been described as Colorado's largest logging in

a decade and it is adjacent to the South San Juan Wilderness Area. The

plaintiffs sued the Forest Service in late June requesting that the

judge withdraw approval of the project. Although the lawsuit has not

been resolved yet, the Forest Service may continue with the project.

The injunction would prevent the Forest Service from implementing the

project until the lawsuit is settled. While the Forest Service asserts

that the logging is appropriate to deal with severe beetle infestation

in the trees and to provide revenue to replant trees, the opponents

allege that the logging and related road construction " will cause

irreparable harm to the area's spruce-fir forest, the forest's

wildlife, soils and streams. " Nearly 16 miles of inactive and

recovering roads would have to be reconstructed to access the trees.

The plaintiffs also allege that the Forest Service violated federal law

by failing to collect population data for species the project might

affect. These species include trout, elk, black bear, boreal owl, and

boreal toad. Not only are the opponents concerned with the threats to

wildlife, but also that the Forest Service did not follow procedure to

protect water resources as the logging area is a critical water

production for downstream users. For more information contact Bryan

Bird, Forest Guardians, at 505-988-9126 x157, bbird or

Ryan Demmy Bidwell, Colorado Wild, at 970-385-9833,

ryan.Michigan:19) During the week

of Sept. 18, whole trees will once again be flown and placed in the Au

Sable River as habitat enhancement work continues. Huron Pines will

administer the funding acquired through two grants, strengthening a

partnership with the United States Forest Service and Michigan

Department of Natural Resources. The partnership, which represents

participation on the federal, state, and local non-profit levels, is

focused on replenishing a diminished resource in the riverine

ecosystem. That resource is the presence of large woody debris.

Historically, large woody debris entered the river system as fallen

trees from forested areas along the riverbank. Large woody debris

structures provide numerous functions in the river system. " In addition

to providing habitat diversity for numerous species of fish,

invertebrates, reptiles and amphibians, the debris protects the stream

banks from erosion and buffers the effects of high water flows, " adds

Patrick Ertel, Huron Pines Restoration Project Manager. As the debris

decomposes, organic matter is contributed to the base of the aquatic

food chain. With the onset of the logging era in Northeast Michigan,

woody debris in the river was cleared to allow downstream transport of

timber. The forested banks were logged which further prevented the

input of new woody debris. To accomplish the goal of placing nearly 500

whole trees into two stretches of the Au Sable River, a helicopter is

being contracted to fly the trees from nearby Forest Service land. Use

of the helicopter allows for the placement of whole trees. With the

root mass still intact when these trees are placed, the complexity of

the structural habitat increases, beyond the practice of cutting trees

and just placing the above-ground portion in the river. The root mass

also helps anchor the trees at the predetermined site where they will

be placed. http://avalanche.townnews.com/articles/2006/09/22/news/news07.txtNew Jersey:20)

DENNIS TOWNSHIP — Ruth Fisher has been a self-avowed tree hugger for

decades with several battles on her resume against people operating

chainsaws, axes and bulldozers. Now, the South Dennis environmental

activist is on a push to save dead trees. Does that make her a

dead-tree hugger? Fisher laughs at the joke and then makes it very

clear she is very much alive and on yet another ecological mission.

This one concerns woodpeckers, a family of birds that owes its very

existence to dead trees. Woodpeckers need the trees for nest cavities

and eat the insects that feed on the dead wood. Saving the whales,

which started Fisher on her environmental crusade decades ago, was easy

compared to saving dead trees. The woodpecker's trick of head-banging

dinner out of a tree, with a long tongue it can wrap clear around its

thick skulls has appealed to birdwatchers for years. There are others

besides Fisher worrying about the future of New Jersey's woodpeckers.

In a state that loses 45 square miles of wildlife habitat every year to

development, the government has become the major holder of the forests

that are left. The state Department of Environmental Protection

oversees 307,000 acres in its wildlife management areas, or WMAs. It's

44 percent of the state-owned open space and it doesn't even include

the newest WMA, the Villas Wildlife Management Area just created at the

former Ponderlodge Golf Club. A red-headed woodpecker has already been

seen there. The state also has 42 parks and 11 state forests. Fisher is

not necessarily sold on the state's effort. She said the state seems to

manage more for the deer herd than for woodpeckers. She opposes

programs that allow homeowners to cut firewood on state lands and once

stopped a neighbor from crossing her property to harvest dead trees."He

thought I was crazy for not letting him take dead trees, just because

they would fit in his stove. My neighbor was not mean-spirited. He just

wasn't educated," Fisher said Development is also a problem. While the

decline of the family farm was leading to more woodland for several

decades, those farm fields are now going straight from agriculture to

subdivisions, said David Mizrahi, director of research for the New

Jersey Audubon Society. "Not a lot of agricultural land is going to old

fields and forest," Mizrahi said. http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/news/local/capemay/story/6776257p-6644242c.html

Vermont:21)

LANDGROVE -- The outlines of an old farm field are visible along a

narrow dirt road, but the area is thick with 80-foot red pine trees,

with saplings of maple, beech, black cherry and white ash spread across

the forest floor. The hardwoods are native here, along the spine of the

Green Mountains. Not so the red pines, which were planted by the

thousands in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corps and now

dominate the forest canopy, blocking sunlight from reaching the

hardwoods. Now, a plan being considered by the National Forest Service

would clearcut the red pines as part of an effort to increase tree

diversity, improve wildlife habitat, preserve historic sites and make

the area more accessible to the public for winter recreation. Under it,

red pines in this 21-acre parcel _ some of them 20 inches across, at

the base _ would be felled to help the native hardwoods grow to

maturity. " We want to convert that to a native mixed-stand and at the

same time take advantage of the wood products. Some are starting to rot

and fall over, " said U.S. Forest Service Resource Biologist Joseph

Torres. The strategy for the Landgrove parcel is a small part of a

Forest Service management plan for the 5,471-acre area in the towns of

Landgrove, Londonderry, Peru and Winhall. The plan, known as the Nordic

Project, would also help preserve historical remnants that lie within

the forest, including abandoned cellar holes, stone walls and other

reminders of the European settlers who carved Vermont out of the

wilderness in the 18th and 19th centuries. " What we are looking for is

to make this a model of diverse forest use, " said Torres. http://www.wcax.com/Global/story.asp?S=5450681 & nav=4QcSMaryland:

22)

The Chesapeake Bay watershed is losing 100 acres of trees every day - a

trend that needs to be reversed if there's any chance of saving the

bay, political leaders said yesterday Leaders of bay-area states

gathered on Kent Island for the annual meeting of the Chesapeake

Executive Council and put saving trees at the top of their agenda to

help the bay. " We've lost a lot of ground with respect to forests, "

said Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., who is chairman of the group.The

council is made up of the governors of Maryland, Pennsylvania and

Virginia; the mayor of Washington, D.C.; the head of the Environmental

Protection Agency; and a representative of state-level lawmakers from

the region. Council members agreed to come up with a plan for

increasing forest lands in the 64,000-square-mile Chesapeake Bay

watershed, both through planting new trees and preserving existing

ones. http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2006/09_23-23/TOPMassachusetts:23)

Egremont – The Nature Conservancy today joined Massachusetts

environmental officials in celebrating the state's diverse and vibrant

woodlands with the announcement of nine new large and many smaller

forest reserves covering about 100,000 acres of state-owned forestland.

Reserves will be managed for their ecological and recreational value

and will be allowed to develop into the old growth forests of our

future. The Conservancy applauded the Executive Office of Environmental

Affairs' action - which also included the announcement of a sustainable

forest management initiative on the remaining 400,000 acres of

state-owned forests. The announcement took place at Jug End State

Reservation and Wildlife Area in the southern Berkshires – part of the

new Mt. Washington Forest Reserve. The nine new large reserves,

totaling approximately 50,000 acres, range from about 800 to 11,000

acres. Klockner noted that several fall within the Massachusetts

Chapter's regional landscape programs – providing opportunities to

enhance The Nature Conservancy's conservation efforts in these areas.

In the Westfield River Highlands, for example, the Lowe's Charitable

and Educational Foundation provided the first charitable investment

devoted to protecting land around Massachusetts forest reserves with a

generous gift that enabled The Conservancy to purchase 270

mostly-forested acres abutting the Middlefield Reserve. Elsewhere, the

Berkshire Taconic Landscape's Mt. Washington Reserve completes a

15,000-acre block of protected and ecologically managed forestland

spanning the Massachusetts, Connecticut and New York borders. In

Southeastern Massachusetts, the Myles Standish Reserve protects

globally-rare and fire-adapted pitch pine-scrub oak forests - home to

rare species such as the endangered Northern Red-bellied Cooter. Other

large reserves include Greylock, Otis, Chalet, East Branch of the

Westfield River and Mohawk/Monroe/Savoy in the state's western regions;

and Cunningham Pond in central Massachusetts. he state is also in the

process of defining some 50,000 acres of smaller reserves, most ranging

from dozens to hundreds of acres. Scattered throughout Massachusetts,

these smaller tracts will protect specific landscape features, such as

vernal pools, or safeguard rare species habitat and other unique

resources, while allowing hiking, bird watching, and other forms of

non-motorized recreation. http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/massachusetts/press/press2633.html

North Carolina:24)

BOILING SPRING LAKES - The chain saws started in February, when the

federal Fish and Wildlife Service put Boiling Spring Lakes on notice

that rapid development threatened to squeeze out the woodpecker. The

agency issued a map marking 15 active woodpecker 'clusters,' and

announced it was working on a new one that could potentially designate

whole neighborhoods of this town in southeastern North Carolina as

protected habitat, subject to more-stringent building restrictions.

Hoping to beat the mapmakers, landowners swarmed City Hall to apply for

lot-clearing permits. Treeless land, after all, would not need to be

set aside for woodpeckers. Since February, the city has issued 368

logging permits, a vast majority without accompanying building permits.

The results can be seen all over town. Along the roadsides, scattered

brown bark is all that is left of pine stands. Mayor Joan Kinney has

watched with dismay as waterfront lots across from her home on Big Lake

have been stripped down to sandy wasteland. "It's ruined the beauty of

our city," Ms. Kinney said. To stop the rash of cutting, city

commissioners have proposed a one-year moratorium on lot-clearing

permits. The red-cockaded woodpecker was once abundant in the vast

longleaf pine forests that stretched from New Jersey to Florida, but

now numbers as few as 15,000. The bird is unusual among North American

woodpeckers because it nests exclusively in living trees. In a quirk of

history, human activity has made this town of about 4,100 almost

irresistible to the bird. Long before there was a town, locals carved

V-shaped notches in the pines, collecting the sap in buckets to make

turpentine. These wounds allowed fungus to infiltrate the tree?s core,

making it easier for the woodpecker to excavate its nest hole and probe

for the beetles, spiders and wood-boring insects it prefers. http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/24/us/24woodpecker.htmlMaine: 25)

Strangely, I am neutral on the project right now. I am against raping

the land, of course. Plum Creek says they won't do that, but who knows

once the backhoes swing into action. But here are two thoughts: Maine

is a huge state, with more forest than any state east of the

Mississippi. It seems to me that the more stakeholders there are, the

more people will want to preserve what we have. I have enjoyed my cabin

greatly; I am much more attuned to environmental issues now that I have

trees and river water to protect. To have several hundred cabin owners

at Moosehead might be a positive thing. (OK, they are selling homes

more grandiose than " cabins " ). Secondly, people need jobs.Your Scribe

used to yawn at such an argument but no longer. Maine's fishing

industry is disappearing Jobs related to logging are also in short

supply. Cities producing pulp and paper like Millinocket are threatened

with economic disaster. Communities like Waterville and Winslow are

stagnant because corporations like Scott Paper have closed up shop.(Sad

aside: I bought a house in Waterville in 1991 for $106,000. I sold it

SEVEN years later for the same price!) And now MBNA, the tech-savvy

financial services company, has been sold and new owners will close a

half-dozen offices that were once a boon to Belfast, Rockland and

Farmington. Grim truth: The Maine economy has tourism and old people. http://outdoors.mainetoday.com/cabincountry/007237.html26)

In 2003, Bob LeRoy, owner of Little Lyford for seven years, was

becoming increasingly alarmed about this new breed of timber company he

was seeing enter the North Country. The Plum Creek Timber Co. had begun

subdividing some of its vast properties into smaller lots and selling

them to private developers. LeRoy knew he couldn't stop Plum Creek from

developing its own land, but, facing increasing financial pressure, he

was afraid Little Lyford would soon meet the same fate. " I was

determined to protect this landscape and keep it open to traditional

uses, " he says. LeRoy needed a new owner for Little Lyford, an owner

who wouldn't hinder the local multimillion-dollar logging industry but

who also had muscle, money, and an army of supporters as dedicated as

he was to making sure that picturesque parts of northern New England

were not going to be sold off and turned into developments of condos

and new homes. " I think, " LeRoy says, " I found a perfect match in AMC. "

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/magazine/articles/2006/09/24/delicate_terrain/Canada:27)

To mark the start of the National Forest Congress, which begins in

Ottawa on Monday, over 60 companies from across North America announced

their support today for the Boreal Conservation Framework - a balanced

vision for conservation and sustainable development in Canada's Boreal

forest. " A broad range of companies from outdoor adventure companies

--including Mountain Equipment Co-op, Patagonia, JanSport and Lonely

Planet - to paper companies such as Seventh Generation, recognize the

real economic importance of the boreal forest, " says Mike Martel,

chairman of the Boreal Leadership Council (BLC), a group of leading

companies, Aboriginal organizations and conservation groups, who

jointly support the implementation of the Boreal Forest Conservation

Framework vision in Canada. Martel, who is also Senior VP Forest

Resource Management at Tembec Inc., adds, " In the last two months,

we've really seen the momentum build, with more and more companies

stepping forward to be part of a solutions-based balanced vision to

keep Canada's Boreal forest a place with a truly sustainable future

ecologically, culturally and economically. " Canada's Boreal forest

spans over half of Canada, and is home to over 600 Aboriginal

communities. It provides vital habitat for some of the planet's largest

populations of woodland caribou, wolves, lynx and grizzly bears. It is

the breeding ground for billions of North America's birds, has huge

populations of waterfowl, and is essential to the survival of over half

of North America's bird species. Canada's Boreal forest represents over

25% of the remaining intact forest on the planet. The Boreal contains

internationally important wetlands and is the largest terrestrial

storehouse of carbon, making it one of the world's best defenses

against global climate change. Jeffrey Hollender, President and CEO of

Seventh Generation, one of the recent Framework supporters explains,

" The Boreal Framework's vision to protect at least 50% of the Boreal

forest is one that we wholeheartedly embrace and are committed to

supporting through sourcing and selling ecologically responsible

products. " http://www.borealcanada.ca28)

The forests' huge value as sinks and reservoirs of atmospheric carbon,

for example, is unaccounted for today but needs to be recognized in

future, according to Mark Anielski of Edmonton, who will make a

presentation to Canadian and international forest officials, and

experts from native peoples communities, the energy, farming and

tourism sectors and other stakeholders assembling for the Congress at

Lac Leamy, Gatineau-Ottawa. Anielski and research colleagues estimate

that environmental services from the boreal – from climate regulation

via carbon capture and storage, water filtration and waste treatment,

to biodiversity maintenance, pest control by birds, etc. – are worth

about $160 per hectare, or $93 billion per year in Canada. Globally,

the estimates produce a rough value of ecosystem services rendered by

boreal forests (almost 10 million northern square km spanning Canada,

Russia, Sweden, Finland, Norway and Alaska) of US $250 billion per

year, a huge figure unrecognized in national income accounts or

measures such as Gross Domestic Product. " If these ecosystem services

were counted in Canada, they would amount to roughly 9% of GDP.

Ignoring these values would be like leaving out the combined annual

contribution to GDP made by Canada's health and social services sector

and half of the public services sector. " " Resource extraction and

development in the boreal are vital to human well-being, of course. The

point of our research is that services provided by the boreal ecosystem

make a quantifiable contribution to well-being as well – values that

are important to reflect in national and regional economic balance

sheets and measures like Gross Domestic Product. " http://www.nfc-cfn.ca/pdfs/nfc-program-e.pdfFinland:29)

Finland-headquartered forest group Stora Enso announced on Thursday its

initiation of a dialogue with the Russian authorities in order to

establish the legality of wood logging practices in the Republic of

Karelia. This move was provoked by claims from the environmental

organisation Greenpeace that half of the wood imported from Russia is

in fact illegally logged. Greenpeace further claimed that it had

received evidence that illegally logged wood had been imported to Stora

Enso's mills, among others. According to Greenpeace, the Karelian

authorities are issuing logging licences without environmental impact

assessments, which are required by Russian federal law. Stora Enso's

sustainability manager for its wood supply in Russia, Helena Jantunen,

said that the company's subsidiary has requested that the Karelian

authorities clearly state their position on the matter and its legal

basis. Should it emerge that wood bought by Stora Enso has been

illegally logged, the company says that it will require immediate

changes and a halt to the purchase of such wood. http://newsroom.finland.fi/stt/showarticle.asp?intNWSAID=13780 & group=Business

Palestine:30)

SOUTH LEBANON: Israeli bulldozers started to level the soil and cut

down olive trees in Yarin in the Tyre region on Monday, spoiling

several cultivated fields and preventing farmers from inspecting their

lands. " Israeli bulldozers have spoiled my land, cutting down the fruit

trees I've planted, " said farmer Shaker Afleh on Tuesday, as he and his

daughter watched the bulldozers on his land from a kilometer away.

Israel's earth-movers have cut down several trees belonging to more

than 10 members of the Abu Dellah family. " Bulldozers have been

leveling the soil for two days, trying to expand the Blue Line at the

expense of our land and livelihoods, " Abdallah Abu Dellah said on

Tuesday. " The international force has done nothing but register

Israel's daily violations of Lebanon's territory, " he said. " Israeli

bulldozers are trying to level the greatest number of trees in order to

monitor the border easily, " the source said. The area's residents said

they feared that Israel would erect barbed-wire fences in their lands

and set up a so-called " buffer zone. " http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=1 & categ_id=1 & article_id=75576

Russia:31)

One of the main problems in the forestry development in Siberia is

shortage of raw material. Such a conclusion was made by participants of

the discussion " The concept of the development strategy of forest

industry in Siberia and Far East " , which was held at Baikal Economic

Forum on September, 21, a KNews correspondent reports. Shortage of

timber is explained by great volumes of round wood export and poor

development of road network in the forests. According to Victor Dolgov,

a deputy-governor of Irkutsk Territory, there are 1,3 km of roads per

one thousand ha of forests in Irkutsk Territory. For comparison, in

Finland there are 40 km of roads per the same area of forest. Moreover,

the cost of 1 km of road construction is $130 thousand. In his opinion,

this problem cannot be solved without investments. Heads of companies,

who were present at the meeting, in particular, Ilim Pulp, noted they

were ready to participate in road construction. But, in their turn,

they need guarantees of authorities that the social sphere of this area

would be developed. The forest companies explained that it would be not

profitable for them to invest into infrastructure and then develop the

new areas by watch method. The companies noted that shortage of raw

material was the reason why a lot of investment projects had not been

implemented. Business will not make investments into new production if

there is no guarantee that an enterprise will have sufficient wood

stock for a long time. http://english.newslab.ru/news/201697Madagascar:32)

If there were a Cirque du Soleil for plants, these would be among the

stars. A new exhibit at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden includes

octopus trees, swollen and thorny pachypodiums, wicked euphorbias and a

gray-skinned baobab. These plants are threatened with extinction in

Madagascar, a country where Fairchild is expending a good deal of

conservation energy. After 160 million years of isolation in the Indian

Ocean east of Africa, Madagascar's flora and fauna are distinctly its

own. Some 80 percent of the country's plants and a majority of its

animals are found nowhere else on Earth. Because less than 10 percent

of the original forests remain, conservation groups are helping

Malagasy people conserve their island's diversity. Fairchild now has a

three-pronged program in the country, including work in the arid spiny

forest of southern Madagascar; a program in a fragmented coastal

forest; and a relationship with the University of Antananarive in the

capital city that may bring a Malagasy graduate student to Miami within

a year. Around the famous Berenty Reserve, where ringtail lemurs draw

tourists as well as doctoral researchers, 100 square miles of forest

have been cleared for fierce and monotonous sisal plantations.

Fairchild's spiny forest work is focused farther west, at Arboretum

D'Antsokay, near the town of Toliara. Here, Andry Petignat inherited an

''amazing collection of spiny forest plants,'' says Fairchild director

Mike Maunder, who visited there last year. Petignat's father, Hermann,

began a collection of the plants in the late 1960s. In the 1980s, the

elder Petignat made his collection into a botanical garden containing

nearly 900 species of plants, including about 100 species of euphorbias

and 60 kinds of kalanchoe. It's a spot on many birders' priority list,

and has a few basic bungalows for ecotourists. The small forest

contains a tree called Sakoanala madagascariensis, which is nearing

extinction, with only 33 mature plants and 13 seedlings left. In that

same forest, two other trees are slipping down that same slope into

oblivion: 1) Schizolaena laurina, with 20 mature trees and 15

seedlings. This group represents an entire plant family, not just a

species. 2) Humbertiodendron saboureaui, with 25 individuals, two of

them producing fruit. http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/living/home/15585260.htmMalaysia:33)

KUANTAN: The state government will continue to keep a close watch over

the theft of logs and bring to book the culprits involved. Mentri Besar

Datuk Seri Adnan Yaakob said the relevant authorities had been told to

step up monitoring and enforcement activities. "The enforcement teams

have been doing their work quietly as they do not see the need to

announce their success. "We will prosecute the culprits involved if

there are enough proof of them stealing our logs," he said. Adnan was

asked to comment on the detention of eight people, including a land

owner, who were believed to have been involved in the theft of logs.

The eight men were detained in Muadzam Shah, Rompin last week by

Forestry Department officers following a tip-off. A consignment logs

believed to have fell illegally wereseized during the raid. Sources

said among the areas targeted by the culprits were Cini, Rompin and

Keratong. http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2006/9/21/southneast/15368883 & sec=southneastNew Zealand:

34)

The company owned by New Zealand's richest man has pulled the plug on

its 16-year sponsorship of " Project Crimson " , a conservation scheme

designed to save the country's pohutukawa and rata. Forestry giant

Carter Holt Harvey dumped the sponsorship - worth hundreds of thousands

of dollars a year - soon after being taken over by billionaire Graeme

Hart in March. Hart did not return calls from the Sunday Star-Times.

" If the company hadn't been sold, I'm sure the sponsorship would have

continued, " he said. Project Crimson confirmed it was in the final

stages of negotiations with a new partner. In 1989, research by Hosking

found 90% of coastal pohutukawa stands were dead or dying as a result

of possums, fires or farming. Concerned by the findings, the Department

of Conservation and Carter Holt Harvey's predecessor, New Zealand

Forest Products, set up the trust in 1990 to protect pohutukawa. Rata

was added in 1996. In 2000, Hosking did a repeat survey and found

possum damage had plummeted because of pest control measures and

regeneration of pohutukawa in Northland, the worst-affect region, had

increased 10-fold. Protection for individual trees and restoration

plantings had also increased dramatically. He attributed the

spectacular turnaround to the trust and its community focus. http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3807554a13,00.htmlAustralia:35)

An environmental campaign to stop the logging of the Arcadia Forest

near Collie in south-west WA has changed direction, with the organisers

now accepting the project is inevitable. The Save Arcadia Forest

Ecosystem Group has been lobbying WA Minister for Environment Mark

McGowan to stop the logging, which they claim will threaten a colony of

quokkas living there. Spokesman for the newly-named Arcadia Action

Group, Brian Green, says it is now assessing ways of working on the

ground to save the quokkas once logging begins shortly. Mr Green says

the Department of Environment and Conservation is doing little to help.

" They are meant to be conservation and land management, " he said.

" [but] they seem to have passed the ball onto the Forest Products

Commission to continue with the logging campaign without any

consideration to the threat to the forest and its ecosystem and the

endangered species found within the forest. " Mr McGowan says he met the

Save Arcadia Forest Ecosystem group on two recent occasions while

visiting the proposed logging area. He says he is well aware of the

group's concerns and the Government is considering the issues the group

has put forward. http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200609/s1747716.htm 36)

More than 2.5 million trees will be planted along the River Murray

between Morgan and Renmark as part of the South Australian Government's

Budget commitment to the waterway. The Government will spend $5.7

million over the next four years establishing the native forest. It is

one of a number of River Murray projects to share in a $241 million

Budget package for the next four years. Other projects include $3

million for salt interception schemes at Murtho, Chowilla and Pike.

Minister for the River Murray Karlene Maywald says the funding will

also go towards the state's target of returning 35 gigalitres to the

river under the Living Murray Initiative. " There's $10 million projects

in this financial year towards recovering that 35 gigalitres which

includes also the purchase of water from willing sellers, " she said. http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200609/s1746277.htm37)

Conservationists have been accused of resorting to extreme tactics in

their battle against the pulp mill planned for northern Tasmania. The

Forest Industries Association of Tasmania (FIAT) says it understands

anti-mill campaigners are planning a boycott of businesses that support

the pulp mill, and also intend to disrupt next month's historic

parliamentary sitting in Launceston. The FIAT's chief executive, Terry

Edwards, says environmentalists are getting desperate due to a lack of

support for their cause. " There is no point in trying to garner a

process of community in opposition to the mill when the process clearly

allows for their science, if they have some, to be analysed against the

science that's already been presented to the RPDC through the Gunns

pulp mill, " he said. Geoff Law from the Wilderness Society says he

knows of no plans for a business boycott or a disruption of Parliament.

" This is a fanciful proposal put forward by the logging industry at a

time when they're obviously very concerned about the public disquiet

which is growing against the pulp mill and which is being demonstrated

on talk back radio, in letters to the editor and on the streets, " he

said. However, Mr Law says a peaceful demonstration at the

parliamentary sitting could be a good idea. http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200609/s1746941.htmWorld-wide:38)

Deforestation Diesel: Such is the moniker applied to biofuel by none

other than a commentator for the BBC, in an opinion piece posted today

entitled " Biofuels: Green Energy or Grim Reaper? " We have always been

optimistic about the potential of biofuel with a couple of big

qualifiers: They do not always offer a positive economic or energy

payback, even though in some places - palm oil in Africa, sugar cane in

Brazil, their payback in both senses is quite positive. They also are

not going to replace petroleum, or even come close. As we prove in our

post " Biofuel vs. Photovoltaics, " the best biofuel crops produce about

6,000 barrels of fuel per square mile per year. This equates to about

55 million Btu's of energy per square mile per year. To produce enough

fuel to fulfill energy requirements of the human race (400 quadrillion

Btu's per year) we would need to devote 10.8 million square miles to

growing biofuel. There are only about 5.5 million square miles of

arable farmland on the entire planet. Returning to today's commentary

on the BBC website, it isn't some petro-puppet coming up with this

scorching criticism of biofuels, it is Jeffrey McNeely, the Chief

Scientist of the World Conservation Union. He makes several sobering

points, including the following: Because biofuel is a profitable

business in many parts of the world, deforestation is now accelerating

to feed demand for biofuel crops. This in turn is causing habitat

destruction. This practice as well puts fragile topsoils that should

never have been taken out from under a forest canopy on track to

eventually become desertified. http://www.ecoworld.com/blog/2006/09/22/deforestation-diesel/39)

Why aren't we planting new forests in the Congo, instead of burning

away more forests to grow Cassava, a biofuel? Why aren't we planting

new forests in the Amazon, instead of burning them to grow Sugar Cane,

another biofuel? Why shouldn't an investment in carbon sequestration go

instead into stopping desertification? What if biofuel plantings were

only allowed on desertified lands? Or even more restrictive, biofuel

plantings would only be allowed as the vanguard plantings, to begin to

restore desertified topsoil, often immediately followed by plantings of

more permanent forest plants. To avoid any deforestation, have you

thought of factory farming biofuels? The original forest canopy on the

planet earth constituted over 20 million square miles, and at this time

there are only about 12 million square miles of forest in the world. To

think this change in land use, combined with the increasing presence of

urban heat sinks on the planet (also something that can be ameliorated

by planting trees), is not responsible for global warming is

counterintuitive, to say the least. Put the forests back. When only 5%

of the carbon dioxide emissions each year into the earth's atmosphere

are from human sources - at most, many estimates cite an anthropogenic

CO2 contribution of only 2% - and over 40% of the world's forests are

gone, you have to conclude the presence (or lack) of forests has

something to do with higher atmospheric CO2, and/or higher global

temperatures! Forests are cool, deserts are hot. Not only are something

like 8 million miles of forest are gone in the last 50 years, but there

are equal millions of square miles of new deserts in the world. Deserts

are on the march along with deforestation on a planet with only 56

million square miles of land surface. http://www.ecoworld.com/blog/2006/09/23/alternative-energy/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...