
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Forest thinning improves the health of older trees and enhances native biodiversity on federal lands in eastern Oregon. That’s according to a new study from Oregon State University, in partnership with local groups in Oregon’s Blue Mountains. We talk to James Johnston, the assistant professor in the College of Forestry at OSU who authored the study, about how selective thinning could make forests more resilient in the face of forest fires.
4.5
261261 ratings
Forest thinning improves the health of older trees and enhances native biodiversity on federal lands in eastern Oregon. That’s according to a new study from Oregon State University, in partnership with local groups in Oregon’s Blue Mountains. We talk to James Johnston, the assistant professor in the College of Forestry at OSU who authored the study, about how selective thinning could make forests more resilient in the face of forest fires.
9,107 Listeners
3,883 Listeners
38,169 Listeners
1,007 Listeners
25 Listeners
6,636 Listeners
219 Listeners
14,490 Listeners
134 Listeners
4,623 Listeners
111,049 Listeners
55,933 Listeners
4 Listeners
10,059 Listeners
4,200 Listeners
15,930 Listeners
5,949 Listeners
963 Listeners
14,993 Listeners
216 Listeners
178 Listeners