Montana Logging Collaborative Fails Restoration Goals

- by George Wuerth­n­er, March 15, 2015, The Wildlife News

The For­est Ser­vice (FS), the tim­ber indus­try and some envi­ron­men­tal groups formed a col­lab­o­ra­tive groups sev­er­al years ago known as the South­west Crown of the Con­ti­nent (SWCC). The goal osten­si­bly is to pro­mote healthy ecosys­tems, but the real goal is to increase log­ging in the See­ley-Swan and Lin­coln areas. The SWCC “restora­tion” objec­tives appear to be in direct con­flict with sound sci­ence and well estab­lished principles.

The col­lab­o­ra­tive first mis­in­ter­prets eco­log­i­cal para­me­ters to cre­ate a prob­lem that they can solve with log­ging. Then the log­ging cre­ates extra prob­lems like spread of weeds on log­ging roads, which in turn requires more man­age­ment. It is a self-ful­fill­ing man­age­ment that dam­ages our for­est ecosys­tems, and wastes tax pay­er mon­ey to sub­si­dize pri­vate tim­ber interests.

The For­est Land­scape Restora­tion (CFLR) pro­gram sup­port­ed by the SWCC col­lab­o­ra­tive has the fol­low­ing goals.

Reduce the risk of unchar­ac­ter­is­tic wildfire

Improve fish and wildlife habitat

Main­tain or improve water qual­i­ty and water­shed function

Main­tain, decom­mis­sion, and reha­bil­i­tate roads and trails

Pre­vent or con­trol inva­sions of exot­ic species, and

Use woody bio­mass and small-diam­e­ter trees pro­duced from restora­tion projects.

Unfor­tu­nate­ly this is not “restora­tion” rather it is degradation.

The first goal to cut risk of “unchar­ac­ter­is­tic wild­fire demon­strates a fail­ure to under­stand wild­fire ecol­o­gy. . There are  no unchar­ac­ter­is­tic wild­fires occur­ring in the SWCC. The bulk of this area con­sists of forests like lodge­pole pine, sub­alpine fir, west­ern larch and so forth that nat­u­ral­ly burn as mixed to high sever­i­ty fires. They burn in large fires when­ev­er there is drought cou­pled with warm tem­per­a­tures, low humid­i­ty and high winds—assuming an igni­tion. That is the way these forests replace them­selves. There is noth­ing unusu­al about any of the fires that have burned and will burn in this area.

Then the sec­ond objec­tive is “improve fish and wildlife habi­tat”. Iron­i­cal­ly large severe wild­fire fire is one of the major fac­tors that cre­ates dead wood. Dead wood is crit­i­cal to many wildlife species. Fires also cre­ate the patchy age for­est stands that is impor­tant for many wildlife species. Fires are even impor­tant for aquat­ic ecosys­tems.  Dead wood in streams is impor­tant for bull trout and oth­er fish. Fire pro­motes the young forests that snow­shoe hares like–hence also lynx. Etc. So if the FS reduces the “risk” of wildfire–especially large fires, it is harm­ing wildlife and fish habitat.

Next we come to main­tain or improve water qual­i­ty and water­shed func­tion. Again this is a good goal, but when you put in a bunch of roads and dis­turb the for­est floor with log­ging equip­ment you are not improv­ing water qual­i­ty. Even tem­po­rary roads can cause sig­nif­i­cant run-off of sed­i­ment. Cut­ting of the sub-sur­face water flow by road con­struc­tion can also cause more sur­face flow lead­ing to greater ero­sion and sed­i­men­ta­tion in streams. So “treat­ing” the forests here auto­mat­i­cal­ly degrades the water.

Of course, one of the jus­ti­fi­ca­tions I hear all the time for log­ging is that after cut­ting the trees the FS will close roads. Yet one doesn’t have to cre­ate log­ging roads, so you can close them, nor do you need to cut trees to close roads. If exist­ing roads are caus­ing prob­lems for water qual­i­ty or wildlife than the FS legal­ly should close them, and they don’t need to log to do this.

Anoth­er goal is to pre­vent and con­trol inva­sions of exot­ic species. A very laud­able goal. But the biggest fac­tor in the spread of weeds is dis­tur­bance from log­ging roads and equip­ment. So in treat­ing the for­est, you cre­ate the prob­lem you need to solve. This is great for cre­at­ing an end­less job for the FS but it’s not in the pub­lic interest.

Final­ly the last objec­tive is to use woody bio­mass from “restora­tion” projects. This last aim acts as if bio­mass is some­how unnec­es­sary for for­est ecosys­tem func­tion. Noth­ing could be fur­ther from the truth. The removal of bio­mass harms for­est ecosys­tems, nutri­ent cycling, wildlife habi­tat, etc. There is a defi­cien­cy of dead wood in many of our forest­ed land­scapes, par­tic­u­lar­ly the heav­i­ly logged See­ley Swan Valley.

In short, the SWCC is clear­ly not using good sci­ence, and ignor­ing the mul­ti­ple ways that log­ging harms the envi­ron­ment. Fur­ther­more, since near­ly all tim­ber sales are mon­ey losers, this pol­i­cy just fos­ter greater depen­den­cy by com­mu­ni­ties and indus­try on gov­ern­ment largess or wel­fare. It’s time to wean the Mon­tana tim­ber indus­try off of the gov­ern­ment teat.


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