Ancient Forest Alliance

Trees accelerate growth as they get older and bigger, study finds

Most living things reach a certain age and then stop growing, but trees accelerate their growth as they get older and bigger, a global study has found.

The findings, reported by an international team of 38 researchers in the journal Nature, overturn the assumption that old trees are less productive. It could have important implications for the way that forests are managed to absorb carbon from the atmosphere.

“This finding contradicts the usual assumption that tree growth eventually declines as trees get older and bigger,” said Nate Stephenson, the study's lead author and a forest ecologist with the US Geological Survey (USGS). “It also means that big, old trees are better at absorbing carbon from the atmosphere than has been commonly assumed.”

The scientists from 16 countries studied measurements of 673,046 trees of more than 400 species growing on six continents, and found that large, old trees actively fix large amounts of carbon compared to smaller trees. A single big tree can add the same amount of carbon to the forest in a year as is contained in an entire mid-sized tree, they found.

“In human terms, it is as if our growth just keeps accelerating after adolescence, instead of slowing down. By that measure, humans could weigh half a tonne by middle age, and well over a tonne at retirement,” said Stephenson.

“In absolute terms, trees 100cm in trunk diameter typically add from 10-200 kg dry mass each year averaging 103kg per year. This is nearly three times the rate for trees of the same species at 50cm in diameter, and is the mass equivalent to adding an entirely new tree of 10-20cm in diameter to the forest each year,” said the report.

The findings back up a 2010 study which showed that some of the largest trees in the world, like eucalyptus and sequoia, put on extraordinary growth as they get older.

“Rapid growth in giant trees is the global norm, and can exceed 600kg per year in the largest individuals,” say the authors.

The study also shows old trees play a disproportionately important role in forest growth. Trees of 100cm in diameter in old-growth western US forests comprised just 6% of trees, yet contributed 33% of the annual forest mass growth.

But the researchers said that the rapid carbon absorption rate of individual trees did not necessarily translate into a net increase in carbon storage for an entire forest. “Old trees can die and lose carbon back into the atmosphere as they decompose,” says Adrian Das, another USGS co-author. “But our findings do suggest that while they are alive, large old trees play a disproportionately important role in a forest's carbon dynamics. It is as if the star players on your favourite sports team were a bunch of 90-year-olds.”

“It tells us that large old trees are very important, not just as carbon reservoirs. Old trees are even more important than we thought,” said University College London researcher Emily Lines, another co-author of the paper.

Understanding of the role of big trees in a forest is developing rapidly even as they come under increasing threat from the fragmentation of forests, severe drought and new pests and diseases. Research in 2012 showed that big trees may comprise less than 2% of the trees in any forest but they can contain 25% of the total biomass and are vital for the health of whole forests because they seed large areas.

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/jan/15/trees-grow-more-older-carbon

Ancient Forest Alliance

Thanks to Cat Abyss Clothing!

Thanks to Cat Abyss Clothing, a new eco-friendly clothing company who will donate 10% of proceeds to the Ancient Forest Alliance from their kickstarter campaign. See their Facebook page and the link to their campaign at: https://www.facebook.com/catabyss

Ancient Forest Alliance

No sale for Dakota Bowl cutblocks

BC Timber Sales (BCTS) removed more than 50 hectares of old-growth forest from its harvesting plans for Mount Elphinstone last week after failing to receive any bids from logging contractors.

Elphinstone Logging Focus (ELF) announced the removal of the four Dakota Bowl cutblocks from the BCTS notice list after BCTS forest manager Don Hudson contacted the group on Nov. 21, the closing date for bids.

“We did not receive any bids today. We will likely retender next spring,” Hudson wrote ELF in an email.

Ross Muirhead of ELF said the group was not surprised that logging companies took a pass on the four cutblocks.

“We always thought the road-building in there was pretty extreme, and since the contractor would have to pay for it, it could be very expensive,” Muirhead said. “I think the contractors looked at the road-building plan and just gave up on it because of a lot of the unknown factors related to building on such steep slopes.”

Muirhead said ELF would continue to lobby to have the cutblocks permanently removed from BCTS’s harvesting plans and was awaiting a report on bear dens in Dakota Bowl after a Ministry of Environment biologist surveyed the area last month.

The group said it has also discovered culturally modified trees and record-sized mountain hemlocks in Dakota Bowl, with ELF member Hans Penner calling it “the largest remaining old-growth forest of its type, at this elevation, on the Sunshine Coast.”

Among the area’s natural treasures, Muirhead said the group discovered the widest known mountain hemlock in the province, at 6.63 metres in circumference. The Ministry of Forests’ big tree registry lists the next widest mountain hemlock, found on Hollyburn Mountain, at 5.99 metres.

In late October, after heavy lobbying by ELF and other groups, BCTS announced it was dropping the 15-hectare cutblock known as the Roberts Creek headwaters ancient forest from its future harvesting plans due to its “unique ecological/cultural attributes.”

At the time, BCTS planning forester Norm Kempe said logging plans for the remaining four cutblocks addressed concerns about slope stability and impacts on the Dakota Creek watershed.

Link to online article.

Ancient Forest Alliance

EVENT: Battle for the Trees – Monday, Dec. 2 in Victoria!

Battle for the Trees:
Major forest campaigns underway and around the corner for 2014

DATE: Monday, December 2, 2013
LOCATION: Ambrosia Event Center, 638 Fisgard St.,Victoria
TIME: 7:00-9:00 pm
Facebook Event page: www.facebook.com/events/1396785523893680 Invite friends!!

By Donation

Drinks! Snacks! Silent Auction of Goodies! New Ancient Forest Alliance calendars and shirts!

Speakers will include:

  • Ken Wu and TJ Watt – Campaigners, Ancient Forest Alliance
  • Jane Morden- Coordinator, Port Alberni Watershed-Forest Alliance
  • Arnold Bercov – President, Pulp, Paper, and Woodworkers of Canada (PPWC) union
  • Vicky Husband – Victoria conservationist, Order of Canada recipient

and more…


Join the Ancient Forest Alliance and guests for presentations on some of the key forest controversies underway for 2014, including:

• The battle with Island Timberlands over their logging near Cathedral Grove, McLaughlin Ridge and other ancient forests on Vancouver Island, and the need for a combined regulatory solution and a park acquisition fund to purchase and protect endangered ecosystems on private lands.

• The BC Liberal government’s resurrection of the unpopular “Forest Give-away Scheme” to allow the largest logging companies in BC’s interior to have exclusive logging rights over vast areas of public forest lands, at the expense of forest protection initiatives, First Nations land rights, recreation, scenery, and tourism, and other interests.

• The BC government’s plans to open up Forest Reserves in BC’s Cariboo-Chilcotin region for logging to make up for a history of overcutting and the pine beetle outbreak.

• The Ancient Forest Alliance’s escalating campaign in 2014 to ensure provincial legislation to protect BC’s endangered old-growth forests.

For more info contact the Ancient Forest Alliance at info@ancientforestalliance.org

Ancient Forest Alliance

VIDEO: Cathedral Grove under threat?

Here’s Global TV on the Cathedral Grove controversy. Take note that only 1% of old-growth Coastal Douglas-fir trees remain in all ecosystem types across the coast (ie. they are not only scarce in the “Coastal Douglas Fir” biogeoclimatic zone which Island Timberlands seems to imply, but in the Dry Maritime subzone of the Coastal Western Hemlock zone where Cathedral Grove lies and other forest types…) and that the planned designation as Ungulate Winter Range for black-tailed deer in the areas now being logged or roaded by Island Timberlands was supposed to be followed up by legislation but the lands were removed from the TFL – and the company and BC government failed to follow through on an agreement to ensure these areas’ protection.

Direct link to video: https://globalnews.ca/news/7667531/fairy-creek-blockade-old-growth/

Ancient Forest Alliance

Logging Around Cathedral Grove Highlights Need For Forestry Engagement

Victoria, BC: Recent forestry conflicts highlight need for proactive and inclusive approach to decision making.
The growing opposition to Island Timberlands’ plans to log a forest stand only 300 meters from Cathedral Grove, is only the latest sign that British Columbia’s Forestry management process is in desperate need of a review.

“As of 2:00pm on Monday, we have received over 2300 emails from concerned citizens, voicing their opposition to these plans. I completely understand and agree with the specific concerns raised by this campaign. It hints at a much larger disconnect between the decisions that are getting made, and the process to get there. I think people are feeling like they don’t have a voice”.

The decision to log the stand owned by Island Timberlands, adjacent to Cathedral Grove, goes against the idea of using a scientific approach to managing our forests. Identified previously as important Black-tailed Deer wintering habitat, the fracturing of this habitat will have adverse effects. Furthermore, Cathedral Grove is an iconic tourist attraction on Vancouver Island – it is unsurprising that there has been such a public backlash against logging activity so close by. This is an example of the current conflict driven model of forestry management – and the negative impacts it has on everyone involved.

“The current model for decision making in this sector seems to rely on large public backlash to spur proper engagement. This approach hurts everyone. We need to have a system that transparently and proactively engages citizens in the decision making process. This will benefit companies by removing a measure of uncertainty and will allow local communities to feel like they have the tools to protect their ecosystems.”

“I believe it is time for the BC government to re-engage British Columbia’s forestry stakeholders, including environmental groups, local communities, First Nation’s communities, forestry companies, and experts at our Universities, to develop a more proactive, evidence-based approach to identifying which areas should be logged, and which ecosystems need to be preserved.”

Quotes by Andrew Weaver – MLA, Oak Bay – Gordon Head

[Andrew Weaver MLA website no longer available]

Ancient Forest Alliance

SEND a MESSAGE website to protect the forests around Cathedral Grove

We've launched a new SEND a MESSAGE website to protect the forests around Cathedral Grove against Island Timberlands' old-growth logging plans, and to protect old-growth forests across BC.

Please take 20 seconds to add your voice, and please SHARE – already 1100 people have sent messages in less than 24 hours since we launched the site!

https://www.savecathedralgrove.com/
 

Ancient Forest Alliance

No logging old-growth on the Duncan River for now

The company that holds the forest license that would allow logging to two stands of thousand-year-old cedar deep in the Duncan River valley says that the trees will stay standing – for now.

In September, a group calling themselves the ‘Duncan Defenders’ launched an offensive against potential logging of the two remaining old-growth stands totaling about 1,000 trees at 58 and 59 kilometre marks to the Duncan Lake Road north of Kaslo – after they spotted flagging tape on the trees earlier this year.

Initially Kaslo-based Blue Ridge Timber, the company that is managing the forest license of the now-defunct Meadow Creek Cedar, told the Defenders that there were indeed plans to log the trees.

But recently Dak Giles, forestry operations manager for Blue Ridge, told The Nelson Daily that they are no longer planning to log the trees – at least anytime soon.

“We were looking at it earlier this year,” Giles said. “But based on quite a few factors I don’t think it would be wise of us to put in cutting permits for those blocks for quite a while.”

Giles said the reaction of the Defenders, who launched an international petition on Change.org that currently has 436 signatures, has ultimately changed their mind on the logging plans.

“We considered what they said they might do if we try to initiate (cutting permits),” Giles noted. “We thought about the economic consequences of their actions and what it would cost us if we had to go the route of an injunction. It’s not really worth it.

“We want to maintain as good a relationship as we can with everyone. And for that bit of cedar, I can appreciate their concern with the old growth stands up there. there’s not a lot of them left.”

When asked if there is potential for the trees to be logged eventually, Giles said it’s hard to say.

“Definitely not in the next few years,” he said. “It all depends on how everything goes. I think as long as we have suitable stands elsewhere it’s not worth it.”

Cedars that are thousands of years old like the ones in question are mostly dead and relatively hollow on the inside, but it there is at least six inches of good wood along the outside they can be turned into high-value clear cedar lumber that’s sought after because it’s free of knots, Giles explained.

‘Business as usual’, say the Defenders

Gabriela Grabowsky, spokesperson for the Duncan Defenders, says Giles’ response rings hollow for her.

“ His response is just business as usual,” Grabowsky said. “This response is not good enough.”

She adds that only an old grown management plan put in place by the province that protects the old growth cedar will be enough to convince her these trees will never be logged.

“Our generation has no moral right to destroy these (trees),” she notes. “Future generations will love and need them just like we and the animals do . . . Somehow we need to get the population’s voices to the politicians to change laws to include protecting old growth,” Grabowsky explains.

“The laws always go in favour of the corporations bent on resource extraction. This has happened enough in our neck of the wood. The Duncan Reservoir destroyed many of the ancient trees; logging did the rest.

“There seems to be no official old growth management plan for this area and that means what’s left can be on a hit list whenever. That needs to change.”

[Original Boundary Sentinel article no longer available]

 

Ancient Forest Alliance

‘Clayoquot Conversations: The Legacy and Future of Clayoquot Sound’

Tues., Nov. 12, 7:30pm, Alix Goolden Hall, 907 Pandora Ave, Victoria BC
Admission by donation.

Join the Clayoquot Sound Conservation Alliance for an engaging panel discussion with Elizabeth May, Valerie Langer, and other prominent people involved in the campaign.

Clayoquot Sound by Tofino on Vancouver Island contains the largest tracts of remaining lowland ancient forest in southern British Columbia. See several great speakers, including Valerie Langer, veteran campaign and protest organizer in Clayoquot (now ForestEthics forest campaigner), and Elizabeth May, former head of the Sierra Club of Canada (now Green MP), this Tuesday night.

Sponsored by the Clayoquot Sound Conservation Alliance:
https://www.facebook.com/events/661210270580070/
 

Ancient Forest Alliance

BCTS drops headwaters block from future plans

BC Timber Sales (BCTS) has decided to drop the cutblock known as the Roberts Creek headwaters ancient forest from its future harvesting plans, BCTS planning forester Norm Kempe has confirmed.

The 15-hectare cutblock, designated as DK045, had been removed from the current timber sale for Mount Elphinstone after a team of scientists identified “unique ecological/cultural attributes.”

“We did that in late August, and as a result of that and concerns we heard from the public, we decided to let this one go,” Kempe said Wednesday in an interview.

After Elphinstone Logging Focus (ELF) “managed to elevate the issue in the public’s eye,” Kempe said his office was contacted by “a number of individuals” requesting the cutblock be permanently set aside.

“And we said OK. It’s part of the consultation process,” he said, noting the status of the cutblock had been “a running issue” for more than two years.

ELF hailed the decision in an Oct. 30 press release.

“For three years we held back logging plans, and so it’s very rewarding now to know that this magnificent stand will remain for its own sake and for future generations to appreciate,” Ross Muirhead said.

Containing culturally modified trees, more than 340 rare Pacific yews, and yellow cedar and hemlock that are up to 1,800 years old, DK045 is “a very special forest,” Muirhead added.

“We’d like to thank all those who supported the campaign, including BCTS staff who considered new information we brought forward about this block,” he said.

While DK045 was removed from the current sale, about 53 hectares of old growth forest in Dakota Bowl is still included in the BCTS harvesting plan for Mount Elphinstone.

This Monday, Nov. 4, Kempe said he would be accompanying a carnivore specialist from the Ministry of Environment into Dakota Bowl to evaluate the area for bear dens. ELF has called for BCTS to designate two of the remaining four cutblocks as a wildlife habitat area, due to the high number of black bear dens.

“That’s something we manage anyway,” Kempe said. “If we encounter a den that’s active, then we’re stopping. We’re not cutting right through.”

Kempe said BCTS’s logging plans for Dakota Bowl address concerns about slope stability and impacts on the Dakota Creek community watershed.

“We think at this stage we have a pretty good plan,” he said.

He also noted that BCTS, in its 10 years of existence, has not logged any old growth on Mount Elphinstone, although about 150 hectares had been identified for logging.

Of the 150 hectares, he said, about half has been dropped from future harvesting plans, largely due to concerns from the public and the Sunshine Coast Regional District.

“We are not just managing for timber values on Mount Elphinstone. We get it, that there are other issues,” he said.

Read more:  https://www.coastreporter.net/article/20131102/SECHELT0101/311029999/-1/sechelt/bcts-drops-headwaters-block-from-future-plans