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Cattledog

(5,914 posts)
Wed Aug 16, 2017, 01:11 PM Aug 2017

Trump plan could open Giant Sequoia monument to logging.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/jul/26/public-land-sequoia-national-monument-wildfires-logging

For the largest living things standing on the planet, California’s giant sequoias have an unassuming, almost gentle aura to them. The recognizable cinnamon-colored bark is soft and fibrous. Its cones are modest. When cut down, the trees tend to shatter and won’t produce reliably sturdy timber.

These majestic plants have a lineage stretching back to the Jurassic period, but fears over their future have prompted a somewhat counterintuitive plan presented to the Trump administration – in order to save the giant sequoias, some say, their surrounding area must be stripped of protected status.


As part of the Trump administration’s determination to roll back regulation and open public land to private industry, the interior secretary, Ryan Zinke, is currently undertaking a review of more than two dozen national monuments declared since the 1990s. The stated goal of the review is to reboot extractive industries such as mining and logging. Supporters of the Giant Sequoia monument fear a unique ecosystem is at risk from timber industry advocates who would peel back protections.

“If this were a different administration and there was a push by the timber industry and its allies to shrink the monument, I wouldn’t take it too seriously,” said Chad Hanson, a rangy tree ecologist who has agitated for greater sequoia protections for the past two decades. “But the Trump administration? Oh, yeah. We are taking this threat very seriously.”

At a boisterous public meeting in June, the Tulare County supervisors voted 3-2 in support of a plan to shrink the Giant Sequoia national monument, which contains the majority of the world’s population of the towering trees, to less than a third its current size. The decision sparked bellowing acrimony that required the county sheriff to step in to restore calm. “It kind of got out of control,” said Steve Worthley, vice-chairman of the board of supervisors in Tulare County, California.

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Trump plan could open Giant Sequoia monument to logging. (Original Post) Cattledog Aug 2017 OP
"Pillage and Plunder" aquamarina Aug 2017 #1
that forrest dies from lack of water and is already to thin to survive much longer. Sunlei Aug 2017 #2
 

aquamarina

(1,865 posts)
1. "Pillage and Plunder"
Wed Aug 16, 2017, 01:56 PM
Aug 2017

should be the motto of this horrific administration. Just shameful that this could even be considered.

Sunlei

(22,651 posts)
2. that forrest dies from lack of water and is already to thin to survive much longer.
Fri Aug 18, 2017, 11:41 PM
Aug 2017

protected areas are to small to survive the outside pressure like dry winds. These are not deep rooted trees like oaks.

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