The Owl Massacre of 2016: Proposed Timber Sale to Take Over 100 Northern Spotted Owls

In the past year, EPIC has talked a lot about the proposed Westside Project—a massive logging project on the Klamath National Forest. In case you haven’t heard, the Klamath National Forest has proposed logging approximately 6,800 acres of clearcuts near the Klamath River. The majority of these clearcuts—upwards of 70%—are scheduled for northern spotted owl critical habitat and/or “Late Successional Reserves,” lands set aside for northern spotted owls. You can find more at our archives, located here.

On Friday, February 19, 2016, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued its Biological Opinion on the Westside Project which detailed the amount of carnage this logging project would cause to northern spotted owls. The numbers are grim. All told, the Westside Project would “take” up to 103 owls; 74 adults and between 12–24 juveniles.

To put this number in perspective, this represents 1–2% of all northern spotted owls left. While this might not seem like a lot, rangewide populations of northern spotted owl are in increasingly steep decline. A recent demographic study estimates that northern spotted owl populations have declined by 3.8% per year from 1985 to 2013 and suggests the rate of decline appears to be increasing. You can read more about the plight of the northern spotted owl and EPIC’s efforts to help save the owl on our new blog post, located here.  From: www.wildcalifornia.org

GR:  The U. S. Forest Service strikes again!  Simultaneous deforestation and attack on an endangered-species.

Drought Adds Fuel to Fire as Zambia Loses Battle to Save Forests

Despite concerted efforts to reduce deforestation, this season’s poor rainfall is causing food, power shortages that could force more Zambian villagers to turn to forests for fuel and income.  From: www.voanews.com

GR:  Population is a bit like impulse spending.  Out of control, it leaves no savings, no cushion to carry us through hard times.  And as Earth’s human populations grow, more of nature must be sacrificed for food, fuel, and fiber.

Infographic: Palm Oil and Tropical Deforestation

Palm oil is driving deforestation—with serious consequences for both climate and biodiversity.

We need tropical forests

“Tropical forests play a crucial role in stabilizing the earth’s climate, storing vastly more carbon dioxide (CO2) than forests in the world’s temperate regions. A 2011 study estimated total carbon stored by the earth’s tropical forests at 271 billion tons—that’s about 7 times the total carbon emissions from fossil fuel use in the year 2008.

“In addition, tropical forests play host to millions of species, comprising about two-thirds of the earth’s terrestrial biodiversity.

“But tropical forests are being cut down for palm oil…

“Palm oil acreage worldwide increased from 15 million acres in 1990 to 40 million acres in 2011. Much of this new palm oil acreage is coming at the expense of tropical forests.”  From: www.ucsusa.org

GR:  If we reduce demand for palm oil and insist that it comes from “sustainable” sources, we can eliminate further deforestation for palm oil plantations.  However, the growing human population will continue to need palm oil and oil from other vegetable sources for food.  Without a check on human population, only remnants of our tropical forests will survive into the 22nd century. Wildlife and wild plants of the forests will be replaced by some form of agriculture. For more on this critical subject, go to:  https://garryrogers.com/2015/11/03/population-resources/ and https://garryrogers.com/2015/10/19/population-2.

Saving the Maya rainforest

“The Selva Maya is home to immense biodiversity – and the ancient Maya city of Tikal. Today, the forest is under threat but NGOs and locals are working together to save it, along with their livelihoods.”  www.dw.com

GR:  Most of the Mayan rainforest is already gone. The nonsensical idea that it can be saved by teaching people to harvest the nuts from the trees sounds like greenwashing for GIZ, the German development organization.  The human population in the area is growing. The nuts will eventually become inadequate to support them, and the remaining trees will begin to disappear.

Five trends that will define the world’s forests in 2016

From drought to economic slowdown, 2016 promises a mixed bag for the world’s forests.  theconversation.com

GR:  Here are five important issues that set the stage for the future of our forests.  I want to add two even more important issues.  We must accept that the stage itself is changing as global warming continues and the growing human population’s demand for food increases.  Perhaps it’s a passing mood, but today the outlook for our forests and all their creatures appears dark.  Their demise is accelerating, and it just seems that too few people care enough to take action to reduce our population or its needs.

Stop Costa Rica’s Illegal Logging From Destroying National P… – Care2 News Network

“As one of the top 20 countries with the most biodiversity, Costa Rica is deeply committed to environmental protection and conservation.

www.care2.com

GR:  After all the protection efforts, Nature is never safe from human progress–sign the petition.

 

Brazil inflames forest fires with pro-deforestation laws

New laws under consideration will likely spark more tree-cutting − despite serious drought already contributing to a big increase in vast destructive fires.

Of last year’s fires, 8,000 occurred in the central region, where the states of Maranhão, Tocantins, Piauí and Bahia share borders. This area, which encroaches on the cerrado, a vast tropical savanna ecoregion that is one of Brazil’s most threatened biomes, has become a fast-developing new agricultural powerhouse, producing soy, maize and cotton.  From: www.climatechangenews.com

GR:  Toxic wastes, global warming, livestock grazing, and farming are eliminating forests, shrublands, grasslands, and soils.  The losses are heartbreaking.  The realization that instead of slowing or stopping the losses are accelerating is dumbfounding.

Growing demand for rice and palm oil ‘driving mangrove deforestation’

“Over 100,000 hectares of forest cover lost in South-East Asia between 2000 and 2012, study finds.”  from: www.ibtimes.co.uk

GR:  This is why humans have to go.

 

Alberta must move away from oil-based economy, minister says

EDMONTON — Climate isn’t all that’s changing in Alberta. The province’s NDP government has arguably made bigger moves on global warming in six months than the previous Conservatives made in a generation.  From: thechronicleherald.ca

Thank you Shannon Phillips.  Trudeau makes it all possible.