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Evergreen State Forests

Posted by Eric de Place
FSC is green, and good for workers too.

olympic_forestExcellent news from Washington's DNR: it will pursue Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certification for some state forests. (This from the agency once cynically referred to by conservationists as the Department of Nothing Remaining!)

The FSC label is often described as an environmental label -- and it is. But FSC standards are just as concerned with workers, and with creating a stable timber economy. So today's announcement is a boon in many ways.

For folks who have followed this issue, DNR's announcement is a bit shocking -- officials have long resisted arguments, including those from Sightline, to seek FSC approval. So I hope it's not petty of me to point out that Washington is committing to pursue the FSC label for less than 7 percent of our 2.1 million acres of state-owned forests. That's not as comprehensive as one might hope, but it is an important start.

Oh, and props to our friends at Washington Environmental Council, among others, who have worked hard on this issue for years.

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Rabbit Redux

Posted by Eric de Place
Undead rabbit returns to the wild

pygmy_rabbit_150Good news: a native species -- one that just happens to be rather cute -- is back from the dead and about to return to the wild.

Here's what happened. A few years ago, the Northwest came perilously close to losing a mammal to extinction: the Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit. It lives -- or lived anyway -- in only one place on earth: the "shrub steppe habitat" (aka the desert), of central Washington. This choice of residences turned out to be a problem for our rabbit, because almost all of the sagebrush country of the Columbia Basin has been converted to agriculture or severely degraded.  

As the pygmy rabbit population dwindled toward oblivion, biologists employed a last-ditch tactic: they gathered up the remaining wild critters and began breeding them in captivity. The plan basically worked: next week officials will release 23 back into the wild, leaving many more behind in breeding programs.

Unfortunately, the Columbia rabbits did not breed like rabbits are supposed to. So in order to boost reproduction and prevent inbreeding, biologists crossed the Columbia Basin species with the genetically similar Idaho pygmy rabbit. So while each of the rabbits being released is at least 75 percent Columbia Basin stock, the pure bred species no longer exists (save for 3 still in captivity).

Still, I'll take it. Officials are now working to ensure that there is sufficient sagebrush habitat to support wild rabbits. And habitat is the real challenge. Sagebrush landscapes generally don't have the aesthetic appeal of old growth forests or coastlines, so it can be tougher to find the will and resources necessary for conservation. That's doubly frustrating because acquiring and protecting sagebrush country is probably cheaper, easier, and more cost-effective per species than many of the more awe-inspiring landscapes.



 

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