Return to the Trees Forum | Post a Follow-Up

 o
Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

Posted by ilovemytrees 6a (My Page) on
Thu, Nov 24, 11 at 9:00

Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

By CRAIG WELCH
The Seattle Times

SEATTLE -- So many pine, fir and spruce trees in the Northwest are riddled with bugs and disease that major tree die-offs are expected to rip through a third of Eastern Washington forests - an area covering nearly 3 million acres - in the next 15 years, according to new state projections.

Because Washington's forests are deteriorating so quickly, the state commissioner of public lands last week said he'll appoint an emergency panel of scientists and foresters to seek ways to stabilize or reverse the decline.

The problem is largely centered on tree-killing scourges such as the mountain pine beetle, which is spreading rapidly and getting into ever higher-elevation trees such as the troubled whitebark pine.

The number of acres of trees damaged in the past decade by diseases such as blister rust and invasions of western spruce budworm and bark beetles is more than twice what it was in the 1990s - and three times greater than in the 1980s.

That dramatic increase has state officials eager to avoid becoming the next Colorado or British Columbia, both of which have seen millions of acres of forest wiped out in recent years by insects.

"If you don't get started doing something soon, it will quickly overwhelm your capacity to respond," said Aaron Everett, state forester with the Department of Natural Resources (DNR). "I'm certainly not going to sit by and watch it happen here without doing anything."

Few ecologists are eager to just let nature take its course. That could expose the region to potentially catastrophic wildfires, upend wildlife migration corridors and alter forest hydrology, which determines when and how much water is available to all-important river systems.

But solutions may prove complex, expensive, politically difficult or elusive. That's because the most significant weapon available to combat forest decay is logging.

Each type of forest and mix of trees responds differently to particular types of timber harvest. And experts disagree over whether cutting down and thinning out trees will always curb the spread of bugs in some of the hardest-hit forests.

"I come from an agency with a strong conservation background, and through time I have come to the conclusion that thinning forests to increase resilience in the face of changing conditions is sometimes a necessity," said Nate Stephenson, an ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in California. "If you've got a forest that's so crowded that the trees are so stressed, sometimes you can reduce the probability of an outbreak by thinning."

But University of Washington professor Jerry Franklin, the old-growth expert whose research helped end most federal-land clearcutting in the Northwest in the 1990s, said that was less true in the lodgepole pine stands most affected by bark beetles.

"There's not much evidence you can control an outbreak of beetles in lodgepole," he said. "We need to be real honest about what we can do. You can cut in front of it, and take away the potential host, but that's not going to help what you leave standing."

The situation has been decades in the making.

Since land managers suppressed wildfires for so long, many trees in Eastern Washington's dry forests are the same age, about a century old. That means they're weak and susceptible to natural diseases and bug infestations - but there aren't young, healthy trees around to stop or slow the annihilation.

At the same time, federal biologists say, warming temperatures have allowed deadly bugs to reproduce faster, survive through winters and reach trees at higher elevations. That's how hundreds of thousands of whitebark pine trees, which the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recently determined belong on the endangered species list, wound up infested by pine beetles.

The potent combination helped drive the number of acres of damaged forest in Washington in 2009 to 1.9 million, the highest level in 40 years.

"I've traveled quite a bit lately in Eastern Washington, and there's hardly anywhere you can go where you don't see problems," said David Peterson, a biologist with the U.S. Forest Service's Pacific Research Station. "I think it's going to continue."

Lands Commissioner Peter Goldmark, a Democrat, called the trend alarming, and decided last week to initiate the first step of the state's forest health "hazard warning."

He is soliciting letters of interest from scientists and foresters based on a selection criteria set by the Legislature. He will appoint a panel in December.

That panel will debate options to reinvigorate forests, likely focusing on various types of timber harvest.

"It's not that anyone's objective is to thin every acre of Eastern Washington forest," said Everett, the state forester. "This is about ID'ing where that might be appropriate."

In some cases, such as along Highway 97 between Interstate 90 and Leavenworth, Chelan County, an area hard hit by spruce budworm, even Franklin at UW suspects thinning out grand firs and leaving more resistant ponderosa pine and larches could help reduce the spread of infestations.

"I am a strong advocate of active management, and I could see doing restoration-type thinning there," Franklin said. But he also pointed out that some of those areas are home to threatened northern spotted owls.

"While some of us have argued that by trying to maintain large contiguous blocks of that habitat either fires or insects or both are going to get it, you still run up against a real resistance from environmentalists," Franklin said.

Peterson, meanwhile, said areas thick with mountain pine beetles may pose a different challenge. There, many smaller-diameter trees would need to be removed to provide more light and water to larger, healthier, bug-resistant trees.

But to be effective, "we'd need to take action very quickly and over a significantly large area, before we get massive outbreaks," Peterson said. "And we're used to focusing on small events on small time scales."

Finding ways to resolve these conflicts, Everett said, is why DNR will be bringing together experts.

"If there are matters in dispute, we'll ask our scientists to make recommendations," he said.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/11/24/v-fullstory/2517138/washington-s tate-scrambles-to.html#ixzz1edC4GNoz


Follow-Up Postings:

 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

Good read for my car ride to the in law's. Thank you.

The article is quite fair. More natural fires would thin the trees providing fewer hosts for the beetles. Selective logging is a decent short term answer. That cheats the so renewal process though.

Wonder how this will play out in the long term. I always try to remember the peaks and valleys of them rabbit vs fox population charts


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

I heard the mountain pine beetle is starting to kill Jack Pines and heading east now. This stupid bug is so frustrating. Around here we once had beautiful ponderosa pine forests that are almost entirely gone now. We have three ponderosas in our backyard which we sprayed, fertilized etc. to keep the beetles away. Fortunately we were lucky and all three lived but many neighbours weren't so lucky. For a few summers we'd hear chainsaws almost constantly. I sure hope Washington can beat these bugs.


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

You're welcome, Toronado3800. I just wanted to get this information out there in case someone lives near the area, and could be affected.

I agree, AspenAcres, I hope they can beat these bugs.


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

I find it funny that when a wildfire strikes people are worried about the trees, yet these same people cannot understand that if we had lower intensity fires more often it would save the trees. To some people ALL fire is bad and no amount of forestry education will change their mind.


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

Actually, Alabama, the realization that fire of appropriate intensity and frequency can be beneficial has seeped into the consciousness of tree growers, foresters, and educated public for some time now. I think I was reading about just this topic at least twenty years ago.

+oM


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

Unfortunately, the public in the southeast doesn't yet appreciate that wildfire is a very necessary aspect to healthy southern pine forests. Very little implementation of fire safe urban planning, landscaping, or construction techniques either. Lot of work to be done before Alabama is ready to handle fire like the western half of North America does.


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

I disagree smivies. Here in Florida, controlled burns have been a publicly accepted part of forestry for more than 100 years. We have far less fire suppression activities than the western U.S. and realize that our ecosystems need fire. Almost all agencies and large landowners routinely use fire in management activities here and the restoration of fire dominated communities is a big enterprise in the southeast. If you do some research into the proportion of acres burned intentionally (controlled burns) vs. all forested lands by state, you will see the 'big burners' are down here. Yes, some of the public complains about it (usually northerners who move here and don't think fire is 'natural'), but in general, controlled burns (and even some natural fires) are part of life here.

Here is a good place to start for more information:

http://www.goodfires.org/


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

Smivies' comments sure seem to match what I see. Knoxville is pretty close to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The park does allow some natural burns to take place over relatively very small areas, but no where even remotely close to what would occur naturally. Communities all around and scattered throughout the park greatly limit what is considered safe areas for burns. When the inhabited, developed, and buffering areas are left out of the equation, there's less left than most people would think.

Below is an article that discusses fire management in the southeast. When reviewing the graph, keep in mind that the number of fires (what the size of the circles on the map show) is what they are looking at and not the area affected. Some of the controlled burns we are used to around here are relatively small and many are limited to burning off fields (not forests).

Here is a link that might be useful: See article on second page.


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

My experience in Florida matches yours, salicaceae. Although there are still some public conflicts when burning in the wildland-urban interface, an active prescribed burn program is a normal and routine part of forest management here, both in timber lands and in public conservation lands. We currently average over 2 million acres of prescribed fire in the state each year, and agencies such as the Florida Forest Service are always working to increase that number.

The article above is an unusually balanced one, that makes it clear that stand conditions (even-age, overstocked stands with a long history of fire exclusion) play a huge role in the current outbreaks. The effect of recent warm winters on the beetle abundance and distribution is a big one too, but not the whole story (as it is sometimes painted). In terms of long-term ecological impact, what worries me most is the movement of MPB into jack pine forests outside of its historical range.


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

  • Posted by botann z8 SEof Seattle (My Page) on
    Thu, Dec 1, 11 at 4:05

I was up in eastern British Columbia this Spring and saw many square miles of bark beetle infestations. I was in Colorado from Steamboat Springs to Pagosa Springs this summer and saw the same thing there. I crossed the Continental divide 28 times in one trip from Montana to New Mexico. Yellowstone twice, going and coming. The destruction is devastating!
I was also in Yosemite National Park where they do a lot of controlled burns as well as in the Calaveras Grove just north of there. We stayed in Oakhurst near Yosemite and Angels Camp near The Calaveras Grove of Sequoiandendron gigantea. Heat and bare ground are necessary for seed germination for these trees. That's why they burn, in addition to reduce fuel build up caused by fire suppression.

The forest Service has numerous pamphlets outlining the benefits of controlled burning. They even admit it took a while to soak in. Their new goal is, diversification in both number of species, and varying ages in the same stand.

Bark beetles have always been around. Good forest management might be able to minimize the effect on our forests. I can't see spraying as a viable option in the long run.
We also visited the Redwood forests near Eureka, California and the forests around Mt Hood in Oregon for a week. We did some real traveling this year!
Now I get to play catch up in the garden!
Mike


 o
RE: Washington state scrambles to fight massive tree die-offs

There are lots of prescribed burns here in south Alabama too, usually during the winter. A longleaf tract was burned a few miles from my home last year.

The most complaining I see comes from higher populated areas like California and south Florida, and its usually about air pollution.


 o Post a Follow-Up

Please Note: Only registered members are able to post messages to this forum.

    If you are a member, please log in.

    If you aren't yet a member, join now!


Return to the Trees Forum

Instructions

  • You must be a registered member and logged in to post messages on our forums.
  • Posting is a two-step process. Once you have composed your message, you will be taken to the preview page. You will then have a chance to review the contents and make changes.
  • After posting your message, you may need to refresh the forum page in order to see it.
  • It is illegal to post copyrighted material without the owner's consent.
  • HTML codes are allowed in the message field only.
  • No advertising is allowed in any of the forums.
  • If you would like to practice posting or uploading photos, please visit our Test forum.
  • If you need assistance, please Contact Us and we will be happy to help.



 
Click here to learn more about in-text links on this page.