...could be cleaning up the pine beetle before it destroys all forests.
This is for those who think that increased CO2 is good because it makes
plants grow faster...

Chris



<<Unless there is a severe winter cold snap, all recently attacked trees
  will have to be logged or burned before the beetles fly again. In many
  cases, such work will require crews going into forests that are not
  commercially viable to get rid of the infested trees. Work crews will
  also have to identify all newly attacked trees and get rid of them too.
  The heartening thing is that in parts of BC where the outbreak is not
  too intense, such efforts have worked. And they could again, if the
  will is there.>>


Canada's looming forestry crisis

   By BEN PARFITT

People rarely get excited about bugs, except in summertime when mosquitoes
swarm and thoughts turn to West Nile Virus.
But there is plenty to get excited about when considering a certain beetle
now overrunning British Columbia's forests, a bug that is on a frightening
flight path toward Canada's cross-country, northern boreal forest.
The economic and ecological implications of the mountain pine beetle's foray
into the boreal would be staggering. Hundreds of millions of trees killed.
Valley after valley carpeted in spires of dead and deteriorating pine. And
one of Canada's most important industries -- one with exports of $40 billion
in 2003-2004 -- facing a looming shortage of trees.
Two years ago, Canadian Forest Service scientists noticed telltale signs
that the beetles had leapt the formidable northern Rocky Mountains to land
near Chetwynd, BC. There, the needles of thousands of pines were now a rusty
red, meaning the beetles had bored into and killed the trees a year earlier.
It was the clearest signal yet that the beetles were on the doorstep of the
boreal, with only a few hundred kilometres more to go before being firmly
ensconced there.
As a beetle infestation of biblical proportions continues rolling through BC
threatening the economic livelihood of dozens of communities, it is worth
asking whether everything is being done to prevent a similar calamity
further to the east.
In the politics-as-soap-opera environment that is Ottawa, it is no real
surprise that a federal government decision in March to give BC $100 million
to fight the mountain pine beetle barely registered in the national media.
Yet how those funds are spent could effectively blunt the attack in one
critical area where the beetles have made a troubling appearance.
In much of BC, stopping the beetles would be about as easy as a beach bum
sucking up an incoming wave with a straw. So intense is the infestation
around communities like Quesnel and Prince George that the once green forest
is a sea of red. But around Chetwynd, where the beetles have never before
been, things are different. They are isolated and still relatively small in
number.
Getting rid of them, however, is another matter. Unless there is a severe
winter cold snap, all recently attacked trees will have to be logged or
burned before the beetles fly again. In many cases, such work will require
crews going into forests that are not commercially viable to get rid of the
infested trees. Work crews will also have to identify all newly attacked
trees and get rid of them too. The heartening thing is that in parts of BC
where the outbreak is not too intense, such efforts have worked. And they
could again, if the will is there.
Curiously, Ottawa's announcement spoke not a word about keeping the beetles
out of the boreal. Yet given the stakes involved, this is precisely what
most if not all of that $100 million should be spent on.
The other thing not mentioned by Ottawa, nor BC for that matter, is that
today's beetle numbers are out of control for reasons that pose huge
challenges for Canada. First, more and more beetles are doing damage because
global warming is making the environment more to their liking, allowing them
to expand their range. Second, thanks to our fire-fighting efforts there are
now many far more older pine trees on the landscape than there were a
century ago. Ironically, by "saving" forests from fires, we're sentencing
them to destruction by other means.
Somehow in the midst of all of this a new course must be charted. The
beetles threatening Canada's boreal forest thrive in situations where
landscapes are much the same. By rejecting monocultures and striving to make
our forests more of a patchwork quilt of wildly diverse ages and species, we
can make them a whole lot less susceptible to the kinds of devastating
outbreaks now underway.
A more hopeful plan would see us embracing diversity at every turn in the
years ahead. The biggest and most important tools at our disposal in that
work are logging, deliberately set and carefully controlled fires, and
planting the right trees in the right places, with an aim to ensuring that
we enhance biological diversity at every turn.
The industry that benefits from logging has a role to play in that work. But
given the enormity of the challenges ahead, public reforestation funds are
also needed. In BC, the province needs at a minimum to start investing about
$120 million per year in reforestation and forest restoration efforts. Once
it does, it will be in a lot better position to turn to Ottawa for further
help.
With the beetles poised for a cross-Canada sweep, bold and creative
responses are required. Anything less, puts our national boreal forest at
grave risk.
Ben Parfitt is the resource policy analyst with the BC Office of the
Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and author of Battling the Beetle:
Taking Action to Restore British Columbia's Interior Forests, a new CCPA
report available on-line at: http://www.policyalternatives.ca.

--
Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives
410-75 Albert Street, Ottawa ON K1P 5E7
tel: 613-563-1341 fax: 613-233-1458
http://www.policyalternatives.ca




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