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Chapter 11: Forestry and Resource Management *Renewable resources cannot run out, no matter how much humans use them.* -Is this statement true or false? Support your answer.- 11.1 Resource Management Resources: • renewable (soil) • Nonrenewable (fossil fuels) • Goal: sustainability resource use that occurs only as fast as can be naturally replaced. What are some examples of RENEWABLE RESOURCES? Renewable Resource Management Must balance human and ecological needs • Forests • Wild animals • Clean water • Soil Managing of resource harvesting so that resources are not depleted. Influenced by •Politics •Economics •Social issues Soil & Fresh Water • Always being made by natural processes (weathering/erosion/de composition) • Topsoil- fertile top layer made very slowly 1in100 years to form. • Continually supplied by natural processes • Maintain quality of water • Necessary for agriculture, wildlife, humans, functioning ecosystems. Wild Animals & Forests • Hunting for food (gameanimals hunted legally) to maintain populations • Populations are fallingdeforestation habitat fragmentation. Management is very important • Overfishing despite laws (Cod) • Poaching • Wood from trees-timber raw material for variety of products • Essential for living • Developing countriesforests are disappearing at alarming rate 1)Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY) Goal: harvest maximum resources without compromising future harvests PROBLEMS: • affect interactions between species & alter entire ecosystems. • Determining target population size largely a matter of trial & error. 2) Ecosystem-Based Forest Management • Goal: harvest resources while minimizing effects on the rest of the ecosystem • Ecologically sensitive areas carefully monitored & protected; resources harvested selectively. Ecosystem Based Management PROBLEM: Ecosystems complex, choosing which areas to protect & which to harvest -challenge. Requires a lot of ecosystem knowledge 3) Adaptive Forest Management • Goal: gather data from areas managed in different ways, & develop a customized management plan based on the results • Management practices continually monitored & adjusted. • Can be time-consuming and may require changing established practices • 11.2 Forests & Their Resources What about a forest is important? Value of Forests •Ecological value: •Provide habitat for organisms •Source of biodiversity •Prevent erosion •Purify water •Store carbon, release oxygen Pg. 331 add figure 7- Mature Forest Structure Value of Forests Economic value: •Timber for lumber & fuel •Source of food •Raw material for many medicines Logging • Un-even aged=More biodiversity trees of different ages offer greater variety of habitats • All methods disturb forest communities • Changes forest structure & composition • Increases soil erosion • Lower drinking water quality • Cause flooding Deforestation- clearing of forest & replacement of it by other land use •Deforestation in tropical and arid regions has the most negative effects due to loss of biodiversity and desertification risk respectively. •Globally, deforestation adds CO2 to Earth’s atmosphere Timber Harvesting Methods Three Methods • Three methods: Clearcutting, seed-tree or shelterwood approach, and selection system • Either even-aged or uneven-aged regrowth 1) Clear Cutting • Involves cutting down all trees in a region, resulting in even-aged stands of regrowth • Changes abiotic conditions in the area, including light penetration, precipitation, wind, and temperature Clear Cutting • Benefit: Cost efficient • Costs: Entire communities usually displaced or destroyed; causes soil erosion. 2) Seed-Tree and Shelterwood Approaches •Seed-tree: Small numbers of mature, healthy trees are left standing, to reseed the area. •Shelterwood: Involves leaving a few mature trees standing to provide shelter for seedlings Shelterwood Seed-Tree and Shelterwood Approaches •Benefit: Less damaging than clear-cutting •Cost: As with clearcutting, leads to mostly even-aged regrowth Selection Logging 3) Selection Logging •Relatively few trees are cut at once under a selection system. •Selection can involve widely spaced single trees or groups. Selection Logging • Benefits: –More biodiverse, uneven-aged growth –Less overall environmental damage • Costs: –Machinery disturbs forest interior. –Expensive process –More dangerous for loggers Deforestation in U.S. •Deforestation for timber and farmland facilitated U.S. expansion. •By the early 1900s, very little old-growth forest (forest that has never been logged) remained in the United States. Old-Growth Forests • Have never been logged • Contain rich species diversity Worldwide Deforestation • Timber from old-growth tropical rain forests is a source of income in developing nations. • Advanced technology enables deforestation to occur far faster • Deforestation of tropical rain forests has an enormously impact on global species diversity. Deforestation •Decreased soil fertility from erosion •Runoff of eroded soil into aquatic systems •Premature extinction of species with specialized niches •Loss of habitat for migratory species such as birds and butterflies •Regional climate change from extensive clearing •Releases CO2 into atmosphere from burning and tree decay •Accelerates flooding 11.3 Forest Management U.S. National Forests • Early 1900’s eastern deciduous forest almost disappeared –Deforestation caused a timber famine • Led to formation of U.S. national forest system- public lands set aside to grow trees for timber & to protect watersheds.- managed by the Forest Service U.S. National Forests established in 1905 Today, managed by to the U.S. Forest Service, for Originally set aside timber, recreation, wildlife habitat, and mining grow trees for timber National Forest Management Act (1976) •Requires that resource management plans be made for each national forest •Plans are required to be consistent with the principles of multiple use (Recreation, wildlife habitat mining etc.) and maximum sustainable yield. NFMA Logging has declined in national forests since passage of the Act, but policies are vulnerable to political influence Private Land • Most harvesting from plantations of fast growing trees in NW and S. • Monocultures- large scale plantings of a single crop. • All planted at the same time (even aged) • Less biodiversity • Some plantations are harvested –uneven aged. Fire Policies Fire Suppression •Negative effects on ecosystems that depend on fire •Fuel for future fires accumulates (limbs, sticks, and leaf litter). •Suppressing small fires increases likelihood of larger, dangerous fires. Fire Suppression Prescribed Burns: * Carefully controlled burning helps to reduce fuel buildup and to restore ecosystems. •Rarely burn out of control, but occasional accidents frighten the public. Healthy Forests Restoration Act • Goal: make forests less fire-prone. Law encourages more small prescribed burning • Removes small trees, underbrush and snags – salvage logging • Problem: Removing snags -erosion -soil damage -Slows regrowth -Animals depend on snags Sustainable Forestry Products • Independent organizations certify that wood products are produced sustainably. • Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) has the strictest standards and most widely accepted certification process. • Certified wood costs more to produce, but will be supplied by timber companies if there is demand.