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KUFM / KGPR T. M. Power Post-Fire Logging, The debate over the use of commercial
logging to treat forests burned by wildfire has been rekindled by
an article published recently in Science magazine[1], the nation’s
leading scientific journal. The study analyzed the impact of logging
on forest recovery and forest fuel reduction following the 2002 half-million
acre Biscuit Fire in southwest There has been an intense national
debate over the appropriateness of logging burned-over forested areas,
typified by the debate over the Biscuit Fire. Timber interests and
the US Forest Service have argued that logging is “necessary” in order
to clear the remnants of the fire and plant new trees. If that is
not done, the fear is that the burned areas will remain deforested
for decades, leading to erosion and the loss of most of the biological
values associated with forests. In addition, there was the fear that
the remaining woody material would become fuel for new wildfires,
further damaging the burned areas. Of course, there was also the attraction
of harvesting and processing large volumes of commercially valuable
trees. Soon after the Biscuit Fire, a team
of 17 Forest Service scientists analyzed the fire area and proposed
harvesting up to 100 million board feet from the burned area, primarily
from areas already served by roads and committed to plantation forestry.
In those areas the value of the timber would pay for the costs of
extracting it and there would be minimal additional environmental
damage. Their superiors in
The study recently published in Science magazine compared similar logged
and un-logged burned areas of the Biscuit Fire.
It found that natural regeneration of trees had been quite
successful, with the burned acres meeting local standards for being
fully stocked with young trees. Unfortunately, however, in the logged-over
areas of the burn almost three-quarters of those young trees had been
killed, leaving those areas significantly under-stocked. Apparently
the logging activity, through soil disturbance and the accumulation
of logging waste materials, had buried most of the new young trees. The felled trees that had no commercial
value along with the branches and needles from the logging dramatically
increased the quantity of both fine and coarse woody fuels that were
left on the ground by loggers in the burned over areas. The density
of fuels on the burned-over forest floor was three to six times higher
in the logged areas. Although
the wildfire had killed 95 percent of the trees, it consumed less
than 10 percent of the woody biomass. Instead of that remaining woody
material standing above the forest floor and only slowly falling to
the ground, the logging brought it all down and left much of it on
the ground because it was not commercially valuable and would have
cost too much to remove from the forest. In short, the logging of the burned-over
forest retarded reforestation and increased the volume of hazardous
fuels, just the opposite of what the Forest Service had promised.
In addition, because much of the logging was carried out in roadless
and old growth areas far from the existing transportation network,
it did not pay for itself. The American taxpayer had to subsidize
logging that appears to have damaged the forest and increased the
danger of additional wildfires. The logging was both economically
and environmentally irrational. This study, of course, was for a particular
large fire area in southwest Part of the answer is a century-old
frame of mind towards nature that many of us, not just the Forest
Service, still carry with us. We
see trees dying in the forest as an “economic” waste.
All of that standing dead timber after a fire will ultimately
rot, fall over, and rot some more. Those towering old growth trees
are at the end of their life cycle and will ultimately become litter
on the forest floor. Shouldn’t we harvest them instead and turn them
into something useful? The
biological sciences, of course, tell us a quite different story about
the value and benefits of natural processes renewing themselves. But
many of us still see the forest as a warehouse of commercially valuable
trees to be extracted, not as a living system that supports us in
numerous other important ways. Until that changes, we will continue
to do economically irrational things to our natural landscapes while
imagining that we are pursuing economic value. That frame of mind
unavoidably impoverishes us. [1] “Post-Wildfire Logging Hinders Regeneration and Increases
Fire Risk,” D.C. Donato et al., Science,
Vol 311, p. 352, |