An environmental analysis published Tuesday by the US Forest Service recommends lifting a 25-year-old ban on logging large trees across six national forests in Central and Eastern Oregon. Source: Timberbiz
The rule, which prohibits cutting any trees larger than 53.3cm in diameter, is part of a broader set of local forest management standards known as the Eastside Screens, adopted in 1995 to protect wildlife habitat and water quality on nearly 10 million acres of federally owned land.
Though originally meant to be temporary, the Eastside Screens remain in effect for all or parts of the Umatilla, Wallowa-Whitman, Malheur, Ochoco, Deschutes and Fremont-Winema national forests.
Shane Jeffries, the Ochoco National Forest supervisor, said the agency proposed amending the 21-inch (53.3cm) standard earlier this year to reflect changing forest conditions and updated science and management priorities.
“Adjusting the 21-inch (53.3cm) limitation to reflect learning over the past 25 years would help streamline restoration of forests in Eastern Oregon and make it easier to create landscapes that withstand and recover more quickly from wildfire, drought and other disturbances,” Mr Jeffries said in a statement.
Rather than having a blanket exclusion on harvesting large trees, the Forest Service is instead recommending replacing the standard with a more adaptable guideline. Restoration projects would generally emphasize preserving both old and large trees, but with greater flexibility for land managers to adjust where needed.
The proposal defines “old” trees as 150 years, and “large” trees as more than 76cm in diameter for grand fir, white fir and Douglas fir, and more than 76cm for any other species.
In February, the Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest Research Station issued a report analysing the Eastside Screens and concluded that removing some large trees may be beneficial for forest health.
As wildfire suppression became a widespread practice, researchers claim the forests are growing more dense with shade-tolerant species like white fir and grand fir. Not only do these trees compete for moisture and resources, but they are less fire-resistant than older, larger ponderosa pines.
Factor in climate change, and studies indicate the forests are becoming more susceptible to disturbances like drought, insects, diseases and large so-called “megafires.”
According to the Pacific Northwest Research Station’s report, “it is clear from our experience in applying ecosystem science to policy in the (Northwest) that simplistic rules and standards will, over time, generate unintended consequences, making it more rather than less difficult to manage for resilience to climate change and other threats, and to provide for multiple ecosystem services.”
Andy Geissler, federal timber program director for the American Forest Resource Council — a timber industry trade group that supports amending the Eastside Screens — said replacing the 53cm standard would ultimately give the Forest Service greater latitude to meet its management goals.
“The objective of the Eastside Screens isn’t changing,” Mr Geissler said. “That’s still staying the same.”
Environmental groups, however, argue the recommendation is based on politics and cherry-picked science that will weaken habitat for wildlife and threaten older, larger trees that act as a carbon sink.