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Page 1: Maintaining Terrestrial Biomes

Maintaining Terrestrial Biomes

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• In the United States, the government manages public lands including forests, parks, and refuges.

• Their use varies from resource extraction to farming to recreation.

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• Multiple use lands include those in the

– National Forest System• Managed by the U.S. Forest Service

– National Resource Lands• Managed by the Bureau of Land

Management– National Wildlife Refuges

• Managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

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Permitted activities include:

• logging

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• mining

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• oil and gas extraction

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• livestock grazing

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• farming

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• How should they be managed? Who should be permitted to use the lands? Ongoing controversy…

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Examples:

• Northern Spotted Owl– Endangered species– Habitat: Old-growth forests

Of pacific northwest

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Versus:

• Jobs and harvesting resources: the old-growth trees are of high commercial value

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Should we “drill baby drill”???

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ANWR

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• Some public lands are restricted in use– National Park System

• Managed by the National Park Service (NPS)

• First established National Park??? – Only camping, hiking, fishing, and boating

(motorized cars/boats are allowed)

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Yosemite

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The Grand Canyon

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Denali

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Arches

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Volcano

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Carlsbad Caverns

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Big Bend

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Glacier

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The Badlands

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Great Smokey Mountains

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• Other public lands are very restricted – meant to be preserved in their natural condition– National Wilderness Preservation System

• Established by the Wilderness Act (1964)• Managed by multiple agencies (BLM,

USFWS, USFS, and NPS)– National Wild and Scenic Rivers (1968)– Non-motorized recreation ONLY

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Types of Forests:

• Old-growth: has not been cut/disturbed by human activity for hundreds of years.– Example: Redwood

Forest

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• Second-growth: forest that has grown back after it had been cut/removed by human activities.

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• Since 1600, 90% of the virgin forests that once covered much of the lower 48 states have been cleared away.  Most of the remaining old-growth forests in the lower 48 states and Alaska are on public lands.  In the Pacific Northwest about 80% of this forestland is slated for logging.   

– Global Deforestation Lecture, The University of Michigan: Global Change

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• Tree plantation or tree farm – Monoculture (example: Christmas tree farm)

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• (example: apple orchard)

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Types of Forest Management:

• Even-aged: Maintaining trees at about the same age and size (tree plantation)– Goal: economically desirable species

• Uneven-aged: Maintaining a variety of trees at many ages and sizes– Goal: sustainable production

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Types of Tree Harvesting:• Selective cutting: medium or mature trees

in uneven-aged stand cut singly or in small groups.

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• Shelterwood cutting: remove all mature trees in an area in a series of cuttings.

– First cut: mature trees (mostly canopy trees)– Second cut: more mature canopy trees but

leaves a few mature trees to “shelter” the young trees (which are shade tolerant)

– Third cut: remove remaining mature trees now that the younger ones are growing to maturity

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• Seed-tree cutting: harvesting nearly all trees in one cutting, but leaving a few uniformly distributed seedlings.

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• Strip cutting: removes all trees in an area in a single cutting (in a strip)

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• Clear cutting: removes ALL trees in a single area. MOST devastating to an ecosystem; causes massive soil erosion if done on sloped land.

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Alternatives...

• Do we HAVE TO cut down trees? Or can we use another resource…– Kenaf: rope, cloth, paper

– Hemp: cloth, paper, fuel

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• The Neem Tree– Pharmaceuticals– Birth control– Fuelwood– Lumber– Infection-fighter– Spermicide– Insect repellent– Gives more O2– Grows FAST

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• Bamboo– Grows FAST!! (24 hr time lapse video)– No pesticides! No fertilizers! No irrigation! No

replanting!– Absorbs more than twice the CO2 as trees!– Alternative to hardwood floors

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The catch??? Don’t harvest wild bamboo in Panda habitat!!

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Types of Forest Fires

• Surface: Usually burn only undergrowth and leaf litter on forest floor.

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• Ground: surface fire that goes underground (most common in areas that contain peat – northern peat bogs). Difficult to detect and extinguish.

(peat bog)

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• Crown: May start on ground but eventually burn up whole tree and leap tree-top to tree-top.

• MOST DANGEROUS!

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Prescribed burning:

• Controlled burning of flammable materials to prevent build-up.

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Healthy Forests Initiative (HFI):

• Timber companies are allowed to cut down economically valuable large trees in return for clearing away fire-prone underbrush.

• Removes large, more fire-resistant trees.

• Leaves fire-prone slash: unwanted branches, tops, stumps.