Nerdy About Nature

Thought Snacks | Fire Mitigation Loopholes use to continue Logging Oldgrowth Forest


Listen Later

I'm going to start releasing some of my slightly longer video here in a new series I'm tentatively calling 'Thought Snacks', because that's what they are...not quite a full meal, but just enough to get those wheels turning and reflecting about the world we live in.


When it comes to impacts of climate change, wildfire is one of the hottest topics there is days - pun intended!  A majority of our forests across Turtle Island have become prone to very violent, catastrophic fires, whether as a result of fire suppression that has allowed stands to become thick and overgrown, or excessive commercial logging that has replaced stand diversity with an even-aged secondgrowth forest.
As a means of addressing these issues, forest thinning has become popular, where trees are felled to increase spacing so that fire, when it does occur, doesn’t have the fuel connectivity to spread and escalate.
In many commercial thinning operations, companies are granted access to previously off-limits oldgrowth forests in order to thin them for ‘fire-proofing’, which in theory would consist of removing the smaller, immature trees to create the necessary spacing and reduce fuel load while leaving the older, more mature and naturally fire resistant trees that would have existed on those landscapes prior to colonization…but unfortunately that’s not often what happens.
This is expensive, skilled work and those little trees fetch very little market value, so instead this thinning is often done by ‘high grading’ these forests, which is a term that means they only take the biggest, most monetarily valuable old growth trees, and instead leave the smaller trees spaced out. This unfortunately does very little to increase the fire resilience and overall ecological function of these ecosystems, meaning that it’s no effective thinning for fire management.
Commercial operations hopping through loopholes and taking advantage of the situation by using either thinning or salvage as a justification to continue logging old growth forest for their own monetary gain, and doing so in a way that actually jeopardizes the health of these lands and our collective future amongst them is just unethical, irresponsible, and shouldn’t be allowed.  We need proper thinning efforts done to restore the health, vitality and resilience of these ecosystems first and foremost to create a better, safer future for our communities.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Nerdy About NatureBy Nerdy About Nature

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

54 ratings


More shows like Nerdy About Nature

View all
Living on Earth by World Media Foundation

Living on Earth

466 Listeners

BirdNote Daily by BirdNote

BirdNote Daily

1,187 Listeners

Living Planet by DW

Living Planet

131 Listeners

Gastropod by Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley

Gastropod

3,625 Listeners

Bioneers: Revolution From the Heart of Nature by Bioneers

Bioneers: Revolution From the Heart of Nature

245 Listeners

Outside/In by NHPR

Outside/In

1,465 Listeners

Nature Guys by Nature Guys

Nature Guys

524 Listeners

The American Birding Podcast by American Birding Association

The American Birding Podcast

641 Listeners

In Defense of Plants Podcast by In Defense of Plants

In Defense of Plants Podcast

1,233 Listeners

Ologies with Alie Ward by Alie Ward

Ologies with Alie Ward

24,048 Listeners

The Wild with Chris Morgan by KUOW News and Information

The Wild with Chris Morgan

3,250 Listeners

Native Plants, Healthy Planet by Pinelands Nursery, Bleav

Native Plants, Healthy Planet

293 Listeners

The Science of Birds by Ivan Phillipsen

The Science of Birds

853 Listeners

Completely Arbortrary by Completely Arbortrary

Completely Arbortrary

1,219 Listeners

Plant People by New York Botanical Garden

Plant People

168 Listeners