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- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!wupost!uwm.edu!psuvax1!psuvm!mek104
- Organization: Penn State University
- Date: Tue, 21 Jul 1992 20:07:59 EDT
- From: <MEK104@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Message-ID: <92203.200759MEK104@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Newsgroups: talk.environment
- Subject: Re: Libertarians and the Environment
- Lines: 82
-
- >> in <92202.221908MEK104@psuvm.psu.edu> MEK104@psuvm.psu.edu writes:
-
- >and <1992Jul21.184409.20859@beaver.cs.washington.edu> apuld@cs.washingon.edu
- writes:
-
-
- >> . . . clearcutting does not "decimate" forests, with the possible
- >>exception of tropical rain forests and even there the size of the clearcut
- >>has a direct berring on forest regeneration. I do not believe that German
- >>tree farms are managed on 300 to 1000 year rotations.
-
- >that was not the claim. The claim is that apparently benign management
- >techniques have a long term deleterious effect on the forests, such that
- >after 300-1000 years, there is a marked decline in their productivity. The
- >forests that these studies were done in were once not managed on rotations
- >at all, at least not in the conventional sense of the
-
- Ah. I see. So you're comparing the effects of modern forestry practices,
- in particular managem ent plans which inlude clearcutting as the means of
- harvest with carefully planned rotations designed to maximize forest vigor
- and financial return with the effects of the random and frequent harvesting
- performed by Europeans 300 to 1000 years ago. These are the same practices
- that very nearly wipped out all European forests. The additional practice
- of removal of forest litter for livestock fodder and bedding was actually
- the primary reason for the state of decadence of European forests at the
- time, since this, and not timber harvesting, was responsible for the vast
- majority of nutrient loss.
-
- I seem to have a vague recollection of the study you're talking about. If I
- remember correctly, it was a "Bioscience" paper that dealt with tree ring
- analysis of standing trees and old stumps etc. in an alpine community that
- was in a state of decline. The hypothesis was that acid rain, ozone, and
- other air borne pollutants were the major factors in this decline,
- particularly due to acid rain mobilizing soil nutrients and leaching them
- from an already nutrient-poor site. I also seem to remember a secondary
- hypothesis that the cultural practices of the day may have contributed to
- this loss of nutrients. This may be way off, but it seems like thats what
- it was about. Then again, it may not be the same one you have in mind.
-
-
- >>What species do the Germans use in their tree farms that live to 1000
- >>years? Of the native species, European forests are primarily black pine,
- >>Norway spruce and European larch, I do not believe that these species
- >>typically live to 1000 years of age.
-
- >As explained above, this is irrelevant. You also seem to miss out the
- >non-coniferous forests that once covered England, for instance, and are/were
- >composed mostly of oak, beech and elm.
-
- The general breakdown of forest types throughout most of Europe is something
- like: pine = 24%; pine-spruce=40%; other conifers = 20%; hardwoods =16%. If
- anything, the species I should have mentioned is Scotch pine. While m uch
- of Europe (incl. England) was once dominated by hardwood species, including
- the ones you mention, it has since been converted to mostly conifers.
- Several reasons for this.
-
-
- > My point was merely that there seems to be evidence of problems with a
- >*particular* forest and a *particular* management regime, even though
- >historically (as in 500 years or more) this regime has been thought of as
- >sustainable over unlimited time periods. I have no idea if this would be a
- >problem with other forest archetypes, but it seems to me that we should be
- >thinking about it.
-
- We ARE thinking about it. There are a whole bunch of studies that have focused
- on the effects of different timber harvesting regimes on nutrient cycling and n
- utrient relations. The general concensus is that correctly implemented silvicu
- ltural systems, and properly laid out timber sales, have negligible impact on t
- he nutrient relations of the site. This is why such things as whole-tree harve
- sting is generally discouraged.
-
- >>>What ... prevents you from recognising the
- idea that trees deserve rights as trees, not as people ?
- >> What can I say
- about this ... I think it belongs on talk.bizarre. [ ... more caricature
- elided ... ]
-
- >It seems you lack much understanding of what the term "rights" covers.
-
- OK, flames are off. Please broaden my understanding.
-
- Mark.
-