Tag Archives: ecology

In the Cross-Hairs Again: Clayoquot Sound’s Endangered Temperate Rainforest

Canada’s Clayoquot Sound is no stranger to logging controversies. In the 1990s, thousands turned out to protect its verdant rainforests from logging during forest blockades. While the Sound’s outstanding ecosystems have been recognized as a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve—a designation that carries no legal protections—logging continues to threaten its few remaining intact rainforests.

Clayoquot Sound is the last stronghold for coastal temperate rainforest on British Columbia’s Vancouver Island. The skyline is rimmed by picturesque, snow-capped mountains and glacially cut fjords. Massive spruce, cedar, and hemlock can tower to nearly 100 meters (328 feet) and rivers slice through lowland valleys. The few remaining intact rainforests provide a sanctuary for wild salmon, the table setter for eagles, bears, wolves, and local communities.

Large blocks of intact lowland temperate rainforests are globally rare and like the British Columbia coastline are exceptional but under threat. More than half of British Columbia’s coastal rainforest has been logged, and intact rainforests are especially scarce on Vancouver Island where three-quarters of its pristine valleys have been logged, mined, and developed. The Island’s reserves are small and fragmented, omit many important vegetation types, and being Land Use Objectives, the reserves are less permanent than Canada’s Parks.

A recent proposal by the logging company Iisaak Forest Resources, threatens remaining lowland areas on Flores Island within the Sound’s delicate rainforest ecosystem. The 15,400 hectare (38,500 acres) island is the Sound’s largest, and is almost entirely intact. The logging company is soon to submit cutting permits to the British Columbia Ministry of Forests, proposing 86 logging cutblocks and totaling some 1,900 hectares (4,695 acres) of intact rainforest over the next 20 years. This would fragment one of the Sound’s last remaining lowland rainforest ecosystems.

Iisaak’s logging plans also are undergoing an annual audit under the auspices of the Rainforest Alliance SmartWood program that will apply the eco-friendly logging standards of the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC ). If Iisaak’s certificate is renewed, logging in pristine old-growth rainforest could commence with the seal of approval from the otherwise highly reputable FSC. To conduct its audit, SmartWood certifiers will rely on regional standards for British Columbia developed in 2005 by diverse stakeholders. The standards identified Clayoquot Sound as meeting FSC’s global criteria of high conservation value forests, which provides a higher level of scrutiny for logging proposals. Because of the rarity of intact low-elevation and old-growth rainforests regionally and globally, SmartWood should place the company’s certificate on hold until the logging company suspends its operations in intact valleys. To do otherwise, would violate the spirit and intent of FSC’s global accreditation programs.

To keep its global status as a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, the government of British Columbia should legally protect remaining intact valleys and provide funds in support of a conservation-based economy and restoration of degraded watersheds. While logging provides short-term benefits, it cannot replace the greater ecosystem benefits these forests provide when they remain upright.

The Sound’s rainforests are part of British Columbia’s globally significant carbon warehouse. Massive amounts of carbon are stored in the giant trees, dense foliage, and rich soils. New information shows that these rainforests are part of a larger system that may play an important role in helping to stabilize the global climate. For instance, British Columbia’s Great Bear, Haida Gwaii, and Clayoquot Sound rainforests store an estimated 1.9 gigatons of carbon, the equivalent of nearly three times the provinces’ annual carbon dioxide emissions from the transportation sector. When these rainforests are cut down, up to 40 percent of their carbon is released as a global warming pollutant.

Clayoquot Sound’s ecosystem is priceless, fragile, and of global importance. What happens next will determine whether rainforests thrive or the pattern of destruction continues. For more information on the Sound and this logging threat go to www.focs.ca/action/index.asp

Sources: Carbon storage estimates were extrapolated from Keith et al. 2009, converted to CO² equivalents, and then compared to British Columbia’s greenhouse gas emissions in “Environment Canada’s National Inventory Report 2010.”  Logging related carbon losses were obtained from Harmon, M. E., S. L. Garman, and W. K. Ferrell. 1996. Modeling Historical Patterns of Tree Utilization in the Pacific Northwest: Carbon Sequestration Implications. Ecological Applications 6:641–652. Regional estimates were provided by the Sierra Club of Canada, British Columbia Chapter.

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About Dominick A. DellaSala

Dominick A. DellaSala is Chief Scientist and President of the Geos Institute in Ashland, Oregon, and President of the North American section of the Society for Conservation Biology.

Island Press Launches TrekEast Book Club

We are very excited about calling attention to a new action campaign by Wildlands Network called TrekEast. John Davis, a founder of Wildlands Network and a “triathlete meets John Muir,” begins a ten-month trek on the Eastern Wildway today, February 3. He will start his trek in Key Largo, Florida and will hike, paddle, cycle, and ski nearly 4,500 miles to complete the journey in Forillon National Park in Canada.

Why is he doing this?
John is on a mission to attract new advocates for the creation of an Eastern Wildway. Creating connectivity between protected wild places is necessary for the survival of eastern species, and can only be accomplished with public support. The Eastern Wildway would provide a corridor for coyotes, moose, martens, deer, and cougars to traverse from the Everglades through the Great Smoky Mountains, Shenandoah, Adirondacks, and up to the wilderness of Quebec.

Island Press and Wildlands Network
Island Press is rooting for John and is supporting his journey and the mission of Wildlands Network. We’re offering discounts on books that incorporate issues and places he will pass through as he makes his way north. As John paddles, cycles, and walks from Key Largo to Tampa, we invite you to read Tim Beatley’s Planning for Coastal Resilience with us, which explores how best to design cities for stronger and more frequent coastal storms. We’ll also read Saving Nature’s Legacy by Reed Noss and Allen Cooperrider. Noss will join John as a guest trekker, whose classic book presents a broad land-based approach to biodiversity conservation in the United States. Later, as John journeys to Birmingham, Alabama, we’ll raft the Suwannee River with him by reading Tim Palmer’s America by Rivers.

Follow TrekEast
Join us on John’s TrekEast to learn more about what he encounters along this winding wildway.

Peter Newman’s Resilient Cities: The Sustainable Transport City

Cities, neighborhoods and regions will be designed to use energy sparingly by offering walkable, transit-oriented options for all supplemented by renewably-powered electric plug-in vehicles. Cities with more sustainable transport systems have reduced ecological footprint from their reduced fossil fuels and greater chance of enhancing their ecology through reduced urban sprawl and car-based infrastructure.

The seventh and final installment of Peter Newman’s Resilient Cities series is the Sustainable Transport City. (Read about the first city model, the Renewable Energy City; the second city model, the Carbon Neutral City; the third city model, the Distributed City; and the fourth city model, the Photosynhetic City; the fifth city model, the Eco-Efficient City; and the sixth city model, the Place-Based City.


The agenda for cities of the future is to have more sustainable transport options available so that a city can indeed reduce its traffic whilst reducing its greenhouse gases 50 percent by 2050 (the global agenda set through the International Panel on Climate Change). For many cities the reduction of car use is not yet on the agenda apart from seeing it as an obviously good thing to do. Unfortunately for most cities traffic growth has been continuous and appears to be unstoppable.  To reduce a city’s ecological footprint and enhance the liveability of the city it will be necessary to manage the growth of cars and trucks and their associated fossil fuel consumption.

The variations in private transport fuel use across 84 cities shows that there is a very large difference in how cities use cars and petroleum fuels. Through a number of studies it has been shown that these variations have little to do with climate, culture or politics, and even income is very poorly correlated, but they have a lot to do with the physical planning decisions that are made in those cities – see especially our ‘Sustainability and Cities’ Newman and Kenworthy, 1999. There is debate about the relative importance of urban planning parameters though within the profession there is increasing awareness that sustainable transport will only happen if there is an emphasis on urban form and density; infrastructure priorities especially the relative commitment to public transport compared to cars; and, street planning especially the provision for pedestrians and cyclists as part of sustainable mobility management.

Urban Form and Density Planning

The density of a city determines how close to urban activities most people can be. Very high density city centres mean that most destinations can be reached with a short walk or they can have highly effective public transport opportunities due to the concentration of people near stations. If densities are reduced but are focussed along corridors it is still feasible to have a good transit system. If however low densities are the dominant feature of a city then most activity needs to be based around cars as they alone can enable people to reach their destinations in a reasonable time. Public transport finds it hard to be competitive as there are just not enough people to justify reasonable services. Most low density cities are now trying to increase their densities to reduce their car dependence.

Density is a major tool available to planners in cities. It is best used where a city has good transit or wants to build transit as the resulting Transit Oriented Developments (TODs) are found to reduce car use per capita among its residents by half and to save households around 20% of their household income as they have on average one less car (often none). TODs are thus an affordable housing strategy as well. In the U.S., according to a 2007 study by Reid Ewing, “shifting 60 percent of new growth to compact patterns would save 85 million metric tons of CO2 annually by 2030.” TODs reduce ecological footprint in cities and undermine the kind of car-based sprawl that eats into the green agenda of cities. Thus this strategy of TODs can enable a city to put in place a clear urban growth boundary and to build a green wall for agriculture, recreation, biodiversity and the other natural systems of the green agenda. Cairo’s green belt is one attempt to do this.

If cities are dense, as in many developing cities, but they do not have adequate public transport and they allow too much traffic to develop in their streets, then they can easily develop dysfunctional transport systems. However their density will always enable them to provide viable public transport solutions if they invest in them, whereas low density cities are always struggling to provide any other options. High density means easier non-car based access but it can also mean much greater congestion whenever vehicles are used. If the vehicles in these confined spaces are poorly maintained diesel engines then very serious air pollution can result so cities need to be very serious about managing the source of such emissions.

Infrastructure Priorities–Especially Transit Planning

The relative speed of transit to traffic measures how effective public transport is in competing with the car. The best European and Asian cities for transit have the highest ratio of transit to traffic speeds and have achieved this invariably with fast rail systems. Rail systems are faster in every city in the sample by 10-20 kph over bus systems that rarely average over 20 to 25 kph. Busways can be quicker than traffic in car saturated cities but in lower density car dependent cities it is important to use the extra speed of rail to establish an advantage over cars in traffic. This is one of the key reasons why railways are being built in over 100 US cities and in many other cities modern rail is now seen as the solution for reversing the trend to the private car. The trend to electric urban rail is now called a global megatrend. Rail is also important as it has a density-inducing effect around stations which can help to provide the focussed centres so critical to overcoming car dependence and they are electric which reduces oil vulnerability.

Many cities in the world are unable to make transit politics work effectively. While major US cities such as New York and Chicago are dense and walkable, and their mayors have been lauded for their green plans and for signing onto the Mayor’s Climate Change Initiative, the mass transit systems for these cities continue to experience budget cuts. The city of Seattle, whose mayor is credited with initiating the US Mayor’s Climate Change Initiative, has struggled to implement any type of rail system. And while the State of California is a global leader on some state initiatives it has not yet developed a plan for how its heavy oil-using cities will wean themselves off their cars.

Yet across the world cities are building modern electric rail systems at vastly increasing rates as they solve the simultaneous problems of fuel security, decarbonising the economy for climate change, reducing traffic congestion sustainably, and creating productive city centres. The trend to fast electric rail in cities is now being called a Mega Trend. Chinese cities have moved from their road building phase to building fast modern rail across the nation. China is committed to building 120,000 km of new rail by 2020. Investment will rise from 155 billion Yuan (US$22b) per year in 2006 to 1000 billion per year by 2009 (US$143b), with around 6 million jobs involved; the projects are part of their response to the economic downturn. Beijing now has the world’s biggest Metro.

In Delhi the city has built a modern electric metro rail system which has developed considerable pride in their community and belief in their future. The 250km rail system is being built in various stages and will enable 60% of the city to be within 15 minutes walking distance of a station.

In Perth, Australia a 172 km modern electric rail system has been built over the past 20 years with stunning success in terms of patronage and the development of TODs; the newest section runs 80 kms to the south and has attracted 50,000 passengers a day where the bus system carried just 14,000 a day – the difference is that the train has a top speed of 130 kph and averages 90 kph so the trip takes just 48 minutes instead of over an hour by car. London, especially with its congestion tax which is recycled into the transit system, and Paris have both shown European leadership in managing the car.

While greening buildings, looking to renewable fuel sources, and creating more walkable communities are critical pieces of the sustainable city, investing in viable, accessible transit systems for cities is the most important component for them to become resilient to waning oil sources and in minimizing the impact of urban areas on climate change. Transit not just saves oil it helps restructure a city so that it can begin the exponential reduction in oil and car use so necessary for the future.

The opportunities for making major changes in a city if quality transit is a priority can be imagined but their extent is often not seen to be more than a mere slowing of traffic growth. We suggest it is possible to imagine an exponential decline in car use in cities that could lead to 50% less passenger kms driven in cars. The key mechanism is a quantitative leap in the quality of public transport whilst fuel prices continue to climb, accompanied by an associated change in land use patterns. This is due to a phenomenon called Transit Leverage whereby one pass km of transit use replaces between 3 and 7 pass kms in a car due to more direct travel (especially in trains), trip chaining (doing various other things like shopping or service visits associated with a commute), giving up one car in a household (a common occurrence that reduces many solo trips) and eventually changes in where people live as they prefer to live or work nearer transit.

Street Planning and Mobility Management

If cities build freeways then car dependence quickly follows. This is because the extra speed of freeways means that the city can quickly spread outwards into lower density land uses as the freeway rapidly becomes the preferred option. If on the other hand a city does not build freeways but prefers to emphasise transit it can enable its streets to become an important part of the sustainable transport system. Streets can be designed to favour pedestrians and cyclists and wherever this is done, cities invariably become surprised at how much more attractive and business-friendly it becomes – see the many projects and publications from Jan Gehl.

Sustainable mobility management is about “streets not roads”, whereby the streets are used for a multiplicity of purposes, not just maximising vehicle flow. The emphasis is on achieving efficiency by maximising people movement, not car movement and on achieving a high level of amenity and safety for all street users. This policy also picks up on the concept of integration of transport facilities as public space. One of the ways that US and European cities are approaching this is through what are called ‘Complete Streets’ or in the UK ‘Naked Streets’. This new movement aims to create streets where mobility is managed to favour public transport, walking and cycling in streets as well as traffic which is reduced in capacity somewhat, mainly through reduced speed. The policy often includes removing all large signs for drivers which means they automatically slow down; in Kensington High Road in London the traffic accident rate has halved.

Building freeways does not help either the brown agenda or the green agenda. It will not help a city save fuel as each lane rapidly fills leading to similar levels of congestion that were found before the road was built. Indeed studies have shown that there is little benefit for cities when they build freeways in terms of congestion and as that is the main reason for building them it does seem a waste. Data from Texas Transportation Institute show there is no overall correlation between delay per driver and the number of lanes of major roads built per head of population for the 20 biggest cities in the USA.

Thus for urban planners the choices for a more sustainable city are quite stark though politically they are much harder as the allure of building more road capacity remains very high. Many cities that have confronted the provision of a freeway have been global leaders in this move towards more sustainable transportation. In Copenhagen and Zurich, in Portland, Vancouver and Toronto, all had to face the cathartic experience of a controversial freeway. After a political confrontation the freeway options were dropped. They decided instead to provide other greener options and hence the building of light rail lines, cycleways, traffic calming and associated urban villages began to occur. All these cities had citizen groups that pushed visions for a different, less car-oriented city and a political process was worked through to achieve their innovations. Similar movements are active in Australia.

Freeways have blighted the centres of many cities and today there are cities that are trying to remove them. San Francisco removed the Embarcadero Freeway from its blighted waterfront district in the 1990’s after the Loma Prieta earthquake. It took three ballots before consensus was reached but the freeway has been rebuilt as a friendlier tree-lined boulevard involving pedestrian and cycle spaces. As in all cases where traffic capacity is reduced the city has not found it difficult to ensure adequate transport as most of the traffic just disappears. Regeneration of the land uses in the area has followed this change of transportation philosophy.

Seoul in Korea has removed a large freeway from its centre that had been built over a major river. The freeway had become controversial because of its blighting impacts on the built environment as well as the river. After a mayoral contest where the vision for a different kind of city was tested politically the newly elected mayor began a five year program that saw:

  • The freeway dismantled
  • The start of a rehabilitation process for the river
  • The restoration of an historical bridge over the river
  • Restoration and rehabilitation of the river foreshores as a public park
  • Restoration of adjacent buildings
  • Extension of the underground rail system to help replace the traffic

The project has been very symbolic for the city as the river was a spiritual source of life for the city. Now other car saturated Asian cities are planning to replace their central city freeways (http://www.metro.seoul.kr/kor2000/chungaehome/en/seoul/2sub.htm/).

What these projects have shown is that we should as David Burwell from People for Public Spaces says ‘think of transportation as public space’. Freeways thus, from this perspective, become very unfriendly solutions as they are not good public spaces. However boulevards with space for cars, cyclists, pedestrians, a busway or LRT, all packaged in good design and with associated land uses that creates attractions for everyone – these are the gathering spaces that make green cities good cities. In the UK the Demos Institute has shown how public transport helps create good public spaces that help define a city. The change of awareness amongst traffic engineers of this new paradigm for transportation planning is gathering momentum. Andy Wiley-Schwartz says that ‘Road engineers are realising that they are in the community development business and not just in the facilities development business’. He calls this the ‘slow road ‘movement. In essence it means that urban planners are asserting their role over traffic engineers or at least making an integrated approach rather than one that reduces city function down to vehicle movement.

With this changed approach to city planning the small scale systems of pedestrian movement and cycling become much more important. Pedestrian strategies enable each centre in a city to be given priority to the most fundamental of human interactions, the walking-based face-to-face contact, that gives human life to a city and in the process reduces ecological footprint.

Cycle strategies can go across the city with greenways that improve the green agenda as well as lowering energy use. Enough demonstrations now exist to show that pedestrian strategies and bicycle strategies work dramatically to improve city economies and to help create a Resilient City. The work of Jan Gehl in Copenhagen followed by pedestrian strategies in all Australian cities, London, New York and San Francisco, the work of Enrique Penelosa in Bogota, the dramatic changes in Paris with the Velib bicycle scheme and the growing awareness that it works in developing cities as well, are all testament to this new approach to cities.

What do you think? Leave us a comment.

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Peter NewmanPeter Newman is Professor of Sustainability at Curtin University in Perth, Australia. He is the co-author of Cities as Sustainable Ecosystems, Green Urbanism Down Under, and Resilient Cities: Responding to Peak Oil and Climate Change.

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About Peter Newman

Peter Newman is a renowned Australian academic and planner who invented the term ‘automobile dependence’ to describe how we have created cities where we have to drive everywhere. For 30 years since he attended Stanford University during the first oil crisis, he has been warning cities about preparing for peak oil. Peter’s book with Jeff Kenworthy, Sustainability and Cities: Overcoming Automobile Dependence was launched in the White House in 1999.  Newman is the Professor of Sustainability at Curtin University in Perth, Western Australia, where he is best known for his work in reviving and extending the city’s rail system. From 2001-2003, Newman directed the production of WA’s Sustainability Strategy in the Department of the Premier and Cabinet. It was the first state sustainability strategy in the world. From 2004-2005, he was a Sustainability Commissioner in Sydney, advising the government on planning issues. From 2006-2007, he was a Fulbright Senior Scholar at the University of Virginia Charlottesville and he returned there in early 2008 as Harry Porter Visiting Professor. His new book with Tim Betaley and Heather Boyer in late 2008 will be Resilient Cities: Responding to Peak Oil and Climate Change.

How the California Fish and Game Turned Community Opinion Around

I never thought they could dig themselves out of the situation. But they did–and the way they did it is a great lesson for all conservationists who work with people.

California’s Eastern Sierra was a pleasant surprise for me.  Previously I had assumed California was a land of gigantic freeways, continuous urban sprawl, and crowded theme parks–but most of the state wasn’t.   When I drove from Olympia, Washington to take my new job as a professor at the USGS Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit in Tucson, Arizona, I avoided the freeways in favor of two-lane highways that weaved through miles of desert, pines, and shrub step dotted with fragrant grey sage.  Interspersed occasionally through this vast countryside were small towns, and when I saw the sign for Portola, I knew I had hit the jackpot.  We had talked about this town so much in my fisheries management classes, and I was excited to see the real thing.

This was 2000, and things did not look good for the California Fish and Game Department (CFG) in Portola County.  Members of the community had vehemently protested their use of rotenone, a fish poison, to kill illegally introduced northern pike in Lake Davis in 1997.  Why was removing the northern pike so important?  Northern pike are voracious predators, not native to California.  It was feared that the fish would reproduce and spread to other areas in the state, like so many other non-native species had done before.  They might endanger imperiled salmon runs and other fish and wildlife downstream.  CFG staff thought rotenone was the answer.  Made from the roots of a specific species of tree called the derris, It had been used for thousands of years to stun and kill fish for food.  The plan was to kill the fish in the lake and prevent their spread across the wider area.

This decision was not popular with many members of the local community, chiefly because the commonly-used rotenone formulation contained a small amount of an agent linked to cancer.  Even though the amount of the cancer-causing agent to be used to disperse the rotenone was supposedly 1/10 that allowed in drinking water by the US Environmental Protection Agency.

Community members marched on the state capitol, threatened CFG biologists with arrest, chained themselves to buoys in the lake prior to treatment of the lake, and pelted CFG members with Halloween candy during the treatment.  Treatment of the lake went forward, under armed guard.  When chemical residues of the rotenenone treatment persisted in the lake longer than predicted, CFG was sued and settled on a payout of $9.1 million to the community.

When I visited in 2000, I asked about the treatment in a local book store and library, obtaining articles and documents I could use in my fisheries management classes in Arizona.  Did I ever get an earful from local residents!  However, when another rotenone treatment was required in 2007 to kill northern pike that reappeared, there was widespread community support, even from some of those officials who had chained themselves to buoys during the 1997 treatment.  Why did public opinion change so drastically?

California Fish and Game learned from past mistakes.  Within two years of the 1997 roteneone treatment, northern pike were again seen in the lake.  Fish and Game staff moved to an office in town to be closer to the constituents.  They held dozens of meetings, working diligently to educate the public and include them in their decision making.  Fish and Game discussed options at these meetings, listened to public input, and tried to address their concerns.  Doing nothing about the newly-found pike was considered, but quickly dismissed—town businesses were impacted severely by their presence, which curtailed the lucrative trout fishery.  In addition, there was fear that northern pike could escape downstream to areas supporting imperiled fish and wildlife susceptible to northern pike predation.  Other methods besides rotenone, including electroshock, nets and explosives, were first tried but were unsuccessful in ridding the lake of northern pike.  Although 65,000 northern pike were removed, many still remained in the lake.  By this time, the public realized another rotenone treatment might be one of the few solutions left.  However, many things were done this time to make a rotenone treatment more palatable.  Previously, Lake Davis supplied drinking water to the community.  California Fish and Game had drilled water wells so that ground water could supply Portola with water.  Residents were concerned with the synergists used with the liquid rotenone in 1997.  For the 2007 treatment, a different, less-controversial formulation of rotenone was used.  The Plumas County Public Health Agency and the state Department of Health Services determined that the treatment plan would not adversely affect the public.  The U.S. Forest Service who owned the land surrounding the lake was asked to support the treatment and close the area during treatment.

Bill Powers, now a county supervisor and one of the local officials that previously chained himself to a buoy stated “In ’97 there were secrets; there were unknowns.  The more the local government people like myself asked questions, the more we were stonewalled.  This time, every question we asked has been answered.”  Furthermore, Powers stated “I’ve seen the evidence now that there are no public safety issues and that it is a necessary evil.  I wish we didn’t have to do it, but we do.  In 1997, it all came down to no communication.”

For the second treatment, the CFG implemented a classic example of how to create positive community change. Answer questions, avoid arrogance, involve the community in decisions, listen. The result was a treatment of Lake Davis with community support, not condemnation.  Those of us in the conservation can learn much from the difficulties – then later success – of the California Fish and Game.
What do you think? Leave us a comment.

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Scott A. Bonar is an Associate Professor at the University of Arizona and Unit Leader of the USGS Arizona Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit. He has over 25 years experience conducting award-winning natural resources research for federal and state agencies and private industry. In 2007, Island Press published his book The Conservation Professional’s Guide to Working With People, which you can read about at http://workingwithpeoplebook.com.

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About Scott A. Bonar

Scott A. Bonar is Associate Professor of Wildlife & Fisheries Sciences with USGS and Unit Leader, Arizona Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit. Bonar focuses on fisheries management, native-nonnative aquatic species interactions and management, desert fish conservation and management, standardized fish sampling, communication in conservation, general fisheries management, management and ecology of introduced species, predator-prey interactions in aquatic systems, and politics and communication in natural resources.

Elizabeth Grossman: Sea Levels Rise and Scientists Wade In

If anyone doubts that the world’s environment is in a state – if not of crisis then of grave concern – I suggest attending a major scientific conference. Among the sobering assessments offered at the 2009 annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science held this past weekend in Chicago, came from climate scientist Chris Field, director of the department of global ecology at the Carnegie Institution for Science. “The actual emissions of fossil fuel carbon dioxide since 2000 are outside the entire envelope of possibilities considered by the IPCC’s 4th Assessment released in 2007,” Field told us.  Atmospheric CO2, he explained, has been rising 3.5% annually between 2000 and 2007, compared with annual increases of 0.9% in the 1990s.

“We’re looking at a future climate beyond anything we’ve actually considered,” said Field. “This is very serious.”

But as greenhouse gas and sea levels rise, there seems to be another trend afoot. As the news from the field becomes more disturbing, an increasing number of scientists are becoming outspoken about the need to engage – not just in technical solutions but also in policy decisions that will make solutions possible. Science and policy have traditionally remained very separate, so this development is striking.

For example, several years ago while interviewing a senior EPA scientist, I asked if what she had learned about a particular substance’s toxicity made her think its use should be reconsidered. Before the scientist could answer, an EPA PR person on a third line cut in saying, “Not her area!” I had strayed to the realm of policy.

Now the message coming from many scientists is that we no longer have the luxury of this hands-off approach. “I’m not going to hang up my citizenship at the Senate hearing room door because I’m a scientist,” Stanford University biology professor Stephen Schneider said to a standing room only crowd at a AAAS symposium. During a session on deserts, an Egyptian scientist stressed the need to fill the gap between science and policy so that his country can effectively link climate issues with agriculture, poverty, food and societal security. Marine biologists emphasized the need to fold climate science into fisheries management and economic development programs, particularly for countries that depend on fisheries for food and financing. And scientists considering the future of agriculture and biofuels production outlined starkly how imperative it is to mesh science and policy to avoid exacerbating multiple environmental and social problems.

This doesn’t mean scientists are becoming advocates and abandoning professional objectivity and skepticism – and my observations are, of course anecdotal. Yet it does, I think, speak to the urgency of what we’re now facing in terms of climate change and all its ramifications. And if the impassioned plea Al Gore made during his AAAS talk is answered, this trend will continue.

“I believe strongly that scientists can no longer in good conscience accept the division between the work you do and the civilization you live in,” said Gore. “The stakes have never been higher,” he said. “I’m asking you for help.”

What do you think? Leave us a comment.

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Elizabeth Grossman is the author of High Tech Trash: Digital Devices, Hidden Toxics, and Human Health.

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About Elizabeth Grossman

Elizabeth Grossman is the author ofHigh Tech Trash, Watershed: The Undamming of America (Counterpoint Press, 2002), and Adventuring Along the Lewis and Clark Trail (Sierra Club Books, 2003). She is also the co-editor of Shadow Cat: Encountering the American Mountain Lion (Sasquatch Books, 1999). Grossman’s writing has also appeared in a variety of publications, including Amicus Journal, Audubon, California Wild, Cascadia Times, Chicago Tribune, Environmental News Network, Grist, The Nation, New York Times Book Review, Newsday, Oregonian, Orion, the Patagonia catalogue, Salon.com, Seattle Times, Washington Post, and Yes! A native of New York City, she has a BA in literature from Yale University. She now lives a minute’s walk from the Willamette River in Portland, Oregon. When not at her desk writing she's out exploring—hiking, camping, paddling, sketching, and watching birds.

Tim Beatley: How Do We Instill a Reverence For Place?

Perhaps because we are such Olympians at moving, at shifting and transitioning to new lives, new jobs and new houses, Americans know relatively little about the places in which they live. Much of my own work has been about the creative ideas for educating about place and region, and for deepening connections to nature and landscape. There are many possibilities, some tried, others only pondered.

Part of the task I think is to make learning about community and place fun; something that you would want to do, and that would compete well with the many other life diversions available. We review a number of innovative strategies in out book Green Urbanism Down Under. These include, for instance, efforts in the Perth region to educate and stimulate interest in fungi—turns out there are 250,000 species (potentially) of fungi in Australia, and they are absolutely essential to the ecology there. Beyond a handful of mycologists, however, there is little popular knowledge of fungi, specific fungi, or broader patterns of diversity and value. A program in Perth aimed to change this through public workshops and publications, but also by organizing “fungi forays”—walks in the urban bush to discover, identify and collect mushrooms.

There will also be especially opportune times to educate about native flora and fauna. One especially promising time is when residents are moving into the neighborhood, when they’ve bought a new home or rented a new flat. They may be especially open to learning about the larger “home” that they’ve just joined. In the Sydney, Australia, metro region there is an interesting community environmental center called The Watershed that runs a promising initiative called “Welcome to the Neighborhood.” Working with local real estate agents, the idea is to convey informational material and tips about living more sustainably to new residents as they’re moving in. While the information conveyed is definitely tilted towards sustainable living (e.g. where can I recycle?) the basic concept of trying to reach people about nature and place at the time they move in makes much sense.

For a number of years I have advocated the idea of an “ecological owners manual” that every new homeowner or renter would receive as they move in. Mostly what new residents receive are things related (narrowly) to the equipment and running of the house. And these are not unimportant—that manual for the dishwasher may come in handy! But it is the larger manual for responsibly living in the watershed, in the bioregion, that is needed even more. Such an ecological owners manual might include basic information about the ecosystems and plant and animal communities in which the home or apartment is located, ways in which a homeowner or renter can help in small ways to restore or repair these.

An even more strident approach would be to impose some form of (dare I say) mandatory short course about the nature, natural history, ecology of the community and region. We don’t think it’s unreasonable to require all those wishing to drive an automobile to obtain a license (and to pass a test demonstrating minimum levels of knowledge and competency). Similar testing and licensing is needed to fly an airplane, or operate heavy equipment, or even to engage in fishing and hunting. As one model, several years ago I had the chance to visit a beautiful marine park north of Honolulu, Hawaii, called Hanauma Bay. Before you are permitted to descent into this pristine beach and coral reef you are required to watch a 9 minute film about the park, its biodiversity, its fragility, and the standards of care expected of visitors. The film was quite good and effectively conveyed not only helpful information, but more importantly a sense of the sacred and unique nature of what was beyond the gate of the visitors. I don’t know if there is any evidence that this short film has changed the behavior or attitude of visitors, but my hunch is that the mere step of requiring visitors to watch it infuses a heightened reverence about the park they are about to explore.

I’m not sure how we might devise an analogous tool for imparting a similar kind of reverence to new residents of a community or region (would it be a film, as well?) but I think it not an unreasonable request.

What do you think? Leave us a comment.

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Timothy Beatley is the Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities at the University of Virginia. He co-authored Resilient Cities and Green Urbanism Down Under and is the author of the upcoming Planning for Coastal Resilience.

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About Timothy Beatley

Timothy Beatley is Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities, in the Department of Urban and Environmental Planning, School of Architecture at the University of Virginia, where he has taught for the last eighteen years.His primary teaching and research interests are in environmental planning and policy, with special emphasis on coastal and natural hazards planning, environmental values and ethics, and biodiversity conservation. He has published extensively in these areas, including the following recent books: Ethical Land Use; Habitat Conservation Planning: Endangered Species and Urban Growth; Natural Hazard Mitigation; and An Introduction to Coastal Zone Management.In recent years much of his research and writing has been focused on the subject of sustainable communities, and creative strategies by which cities and towns can fundamentally reduce their ecological footprints, while at the same time becoming more livable and equitable places. He is the author of many books, including Biophilic Cities, Resilient Cities, and Green Urbanism (Island Press).

The State of the World According to Paul Ehrlich

Stanford professor Paul Ehrlich delivered a seminar to the Long Now Foundation a few weeks ago, and you can watch it here. Ehrlich offers an overview of the “state of the world” from the point of view of an ecologist/biologist.

Ehrlich is the co-author of The Dominant Animal: Human Evolution and the Environment.

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About Paul Ehrlich

Paul R. Ehrlich is a co-founder with Peter H. Raven of the field of co-evolution, and has pursued long-term studies of the structure, dynamics, and genetics of natural butterfly populations. He has also been a pioneer in alerting the public to the problems of overpopulation, and in raising issues of population, resources, and the environment as matters of public policy. Ehrlich is the author of The Population Bomb, and many other books, as well as hundreds of papers.  Ehrlich is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Philosophical Society, and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. Ehrlich has received several honorary degrees, the John Muir Award of the Sierra Club, the Gold Medal Award of the World Wildlife Fund International, a MacArthur Prize Fellowship, the Crafoord Prize of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences (given in lieu of a Nobel Prize in areas where the Nobel is not given), in 1993 the Volvo Environmental Prize, in 1994 the United Nations' Sasakawa Environment Prize, in 1995 the Heinz Award for the Environment, in 1998 the Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement and the Dr. A. H. Heineken Prize for Environmental Sciences, in 1999 the Blue Planet Prize, in 2001 the Eminent Ecologist Award of the Ecological Society of America and the Distinguished Scientist Award of the American Institute of Biological Sciences. In addition to The Population Bomb, Ehrlich is the author of Human Natures: Genes, Cultures, and the Human Prospect (Island Press, 2000) and co-author of The Work of Nature: How The Diversity Of Life Sustains Us (Island Press, 1998). With his wife Anne, he is the author of Betrayal of Science and Reason: How Anti-Environmental Rhetoric Threatens Our Future (Island Press, 1996) and One With Nineveh: Politics, Consumption, and the Human Future (Island Press, 2004).  His latest book with Anne is The Dominant Animal: Human Evolution and the Environment (Island Press, 2008). Paul R. Ehrlich received his Ph.D. from the University of Kansas.

Steve Pyne: The firefight

The firefight is the great set-piece of American fire management.  It seems so obvious: Control the bad fires before you introduce good ones.  Seize the battlefield.  The drama is overpowering, a moral equivalent of war; exciting, potentially lethal, inextinguishably telegenic.  For some seven decades the U.S. threw everything it had into the fight against fire.  It won far more battles than it surrendered, and in the end it lost the war.

In truth, fire’s suppression began on the western public lands with overgrazing in the 1870s and the abolition of aboriginal burning.  The first stripped out the fine surface fuels that carry fire, and the latter, a source of ignition that had kept fire constantly simmering.  Not until the early 20th century did active firefighting become organized.  Then, led by the U.S. Forest Service, it scaled up.  During the New Deal, a bold “experiment on a continental scale” that aspired to end the fire menace once and for all led to the 1935 10 AM policy, which stipulated a single standard for every fire: control by 10 AM the morning following its report.  Destroy every small fire and you prevent all the big ones.

That assault only created an ecological insurgency that has steadily worsened, and over the past couple of decades of western drought has become uncontainable.  Like a declaration of martial law, the firefight is a means to put down a temporary bout of environmental unrest; it is not a means by which to govern.  The outcome has been more fuels on the land, more savage fires, more damages and dangers, and more expensive efforts at suppression.  Agency doubts surfaced during the 1994 season, and became public as the 2000 fires revisited the Northern Rockies and the fire-storied landscapes of the Big Blowup of 1910.

Worse, the suppression strategy has never coped, even intellectually, with the conundrum of the big fire or big fire season.  However elaborate, the temporary demands of a major eruption of fires across a region will overwhelm the ability to hit and hold every fire while it is small.  Yet once a burn becomes big, the initial-attack strategy behind suppression collapses.  Besides, high-intensity fires are exactly what certain biotas crave.  At some point, probably when the country has burned through whatever monies it can borrow, the spectacle will lose its attractions, and suppression will become what it should have been from the start: a means to assist the other strategies.

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Steve Pyne is the author of Tending Fire: Coping with America’s Wildland Fires. He is a professor in the School of Life Sciences at Arizona State University.

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About Stephen Pyne

Stephen Pyne is one of the country's (and the world's) foremost writers on fire. He's written numerous books on particular regions of fire in the United States and one on fire in Australia. A firefighter himself in the Grand Canyon region for years, and a former MacArthur Foundation fellow, he's now a professor of history at Arizona State University.

Steve Pyne: From Fire to ICE

When the fire community contemplates global warming, most know what it means. It means more fires, more big fires, more damaging fires, fires in places that have few now, and megafires everywhere. It means or should mean more engines and air tankers, more hotshots and fire teams, more funding, more prophylactic prescribed burns, more research – always more research.  It means more prestige, perhaps glory, to firefighters as first-responders and defenders against a fiery madness. The warmed new world to come will be today’s world in a crock pot or turning over a spit.

But the real challenges may lie elsewhere, because global warming – depending how rapidly it happens and how full of misdirections – may mean a difference in kind, not simply of quantity. It means fire management must become carbon neutral. This will demand that prescribed burning be justified as an ecological process, not as a “tool” (we’ll be told to find another tool). It will question plans to uproot and burn off stored woody carbon on tens of millions of acres of public land. It may compromise ambitions to make “natural” fire the responsible agent over vast portions of the public estate.  The roster has barely begun.

The deep challenge will be to our conception of fire’s ecology and history, and to our understanding of ourselves as fire creatures. Contemporary fire thinking continues to obsess over wilderness. It should begin instead with the landscapes shaped by anthropogenic fire and consider wilderness as a special case in which people have chosen to remove themselves. That would place people at the core. The dynamics of fire on Earth today are those humans have created or maintain.  Even climate, that ultimate referent, is now being unhinged by humanity’s combustion habits.

Yet the internal combustion engine (ICE) has no standing in the studied ecology of earthly fire, nor are people recognized seriously as fire creatures, as holders over a species monopoly, who complete the cycle of fire for the circle of life. If they were, then it would be possible to bridge, as today it is not, the chasm between free-burning fire and fossil-fueled combustion. The link is us. All in all, the world today has too much of the wrong fire and too little of the right, the developed world too much wildfire and too little controlled burning, the Earth too much combustion and too little fire.

These paradoxes dissolve if we reconstitute our fire science on ourselves. The human decision to reroute its firepower through machines rather than surface biomass has set up an ecological cascade that we have barely begun to contemplate, save for emissions. Until we recognize that we are the common cause, we will not be able to appreciate what industrialization means for fire’s earthly ecology. We have to move our thinking from fire to ICE.

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Steve Pyne is the author of Tending Fire: Coping with America’s Wildland Fires. He is a professor in the School of Life Sciences at Arizona State University.

dominickdellasala

About Stephen Pyne

Stephen Pyne is one of the country's (and the world's) foremost writers on fire. He's written numerous books on particular regions of fire in the United States and one on fire in Australia. A firefighter himself in the Grand Canyon region for years, and a former MacArthur Foundation fellow, he's now a professor of history at Arizona State University.

Steve Pyne: A Retrospective – Yellowstone 20 Years Later

When did the modern era in fire management begin? For much of the American public it began in the summer of 1988 when flames soared through Yellowstone day after day on their TV. The message broadcast by the fire community was that fire was a natural force of great majesty, that fire belonged in Yellowstone as much as wolves, that trying to suppress such a outburst of natural power was as misguided as fighting a hurricane. The forest would return. Yellowstone would renew itself.

Yet the Yellowstone conflagration seems most significant in retrospect for what the orthodox narrative did not say and what it did not do. The received story did not address the ways the fires were the outcome of a long history of interaction between people and nature. The 1988 fires burned off in one season what would probably have burned over the course of a century, following the arrival of the U.S. Cavalry in 1886. The largest and most dramatic of the fires, the North Fork, started outside the park from human causes. Failed backfiring operations boosted significantly the final acreage and shape of the burns.

Nor did the fires reform policy; that had been resolved 20 years earlier for the National Park Service. Rather than inaugurating a grand era of wilderness fire, the 1988 Götterdämmerung closed out that era, and allowed the problem of exurban fires to command center stage. The fires did affect practice, however, since every park and forest had to shut down fire programs and resubmit fire plans for review. This cold start delayed fire’s presence nationally for several years, and in places, for decades. The fires’ real ecological effects were off-site because understanding of the fires got routed through institutions.

The deeper story, however, is one of missed opportunities. The official line defined the issue as whether free-burning fire belonged in Yellowstone or not. Of course it belonged. The real issue was how it belonged – by what means, at what costs, under what social compact. This never got discussed – was not allowed into the discourse. Instead, the ends, naturalness, determined the means available – eg, “natural” fires rather than prescribed fires.

This might suit solipcistic Yellowstone but it has not well served the national fire community. We are still waiting for that robust discussion, the one Yellowstone should have prompted, and didn’t.

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Steve Pyne is the author of Tending Fire: Coping with America’s Wildland Fires. He is a professor in the School of Life Sciences at Arizona State University.

dominickdellasala

About Stephen Pyne

Stephen Pyne is one of the country's (and the world's) foremost writers on fire. He's written numerous books on particular regions of fire in the United States and one on fire in Australia. A firefighter himself in the Grand Canyon region for years, and a former MacArthur Foundation fellow, he's now a professor of history at Arizona State University.