Bright Green Blog

A stand of old-growth aspen rise beside the Green Mountain Trail – Jedediah Smith Wilderness, Wyoming. (NEWSCOM)

EarthTalk: How threatened are US old-growth forests?

Agencies can’t agree on a definition, which hobbles preservation efforts.

By The Editors of E – The Environmental Magazine  |  January 2, 2009 edition

Q: How much “old growth” forest is left in the United States, and is it all protected from logging at this point?
– John Foye, via e-mail

A: As crazy as it sounds, no one really knows how much old-growth forest is left in America, mainly because various agencies and scientists define it differently. Generally speaking, “old growth” refers to forests containing trees often hundreds, sometimes thousands, of years old. But even when there is agreement on a specific definition, differences in the methods used to inventory remaining stands of old-growth forest can produce major discrepancies – or so complains the National Commission on Science for Sustainable Forestry (NCSSF) in its recent report, “Beyond Old Growth: Older Forests in a Changing World.”

In 1991, for example, the US Forest Service and the nonprofit Wilderness Society each released its own inventory of old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest and northern California. They both used the Forest Service’s definition of old growth based on the number, age, and density of large trees per acre, the characteristics of the forest canopy, the number of dead standing trees and fallen logs, and other criteria. Because each agency used different remote-sensing techniques to gather data, however, the Forest Service came up with 4.3 million acres of old growth and the Wilderness Society found only 2 million acres.

The NCSSF also studied the data. They concluded that 3.5 million acres (or 6 percent) of the region’s 56.8 million acres of forest qualified as old growth – that is, largely trees more than 30 inches in diameter with complex forest canopies. If the definition of old growth were broadened to include older forest with medium-diameter trees and both simple and complex canopies, NCSSF said their estimate would go up substantially.

In the Northeast, less than 1 percent of the forest is old growth, though mature forests that will become old growth in a few decades are more abundant there. The Southeast has even less acreage – a 1993 inventory found about 425 old-growth sites across the region, equaling only a half a percent of total forest area. The Southwest has only a few scattered pockets of old growth (mostly Ponderosa pine), but for the most part is not known for its old trees. Old growth is even scarcer in the Great Lakes region.

It is hard to say whether the remaining pockets of scattered old growth in areas besides the Pacific Northwest will remain protected, but environmentalists are working hard to save what they can in northern California, Oregon, and Washington State. The outgoing Bush administration recently announced plans to increase logging across Oregon’s remaining old-growth reserves by some 700 percent, in effect overturning the landmark Northwest Forest Plan of 1994 that set aside most of the region’s remaining old growth as habitat for the endangered spotted owl.

Advocates for protecting remaining old growth say it’s important for many reasons. “These areas provide some of the cleanest drinking water in the world, critical salmon and wildlife habitat, world-class recreational opportunities, and critical carbon storage in our fight against global warming,” says Jonathan Jelen of the nonprofit Oregon Wild, an activist conservation group, adding that as much as 20 percent of the emissions related to global warming can be attributed to deforestation and poor forest management. “A growing body of evidence is showing the critical role that forests – and old-growth forests in particular – can play in mitigating climate change,” he says.

Got an environmental question? Write: EarthTalk, c/o E – The Environmental Magazine, Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881. Or e-mail: earthtalk@emagazine.com.

( More stories )

Comments

1. Miguel Vieira | 01.02.09

There is a list of old-growth forests (which I help maintain) on Wikipedia. If you live in a forested part of the United States, there is most likely a protected and publicly accessible old-growth forest nearby that you can see for yourself.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_old_growth_forests#United_States

2. nature | 01.04.09

The situation is worse for the Third World countries. The developed countries import large accounts of logs , pulp or wood-making products from underdeveloped or developing countries to reserve their forest resources. Poor countries need money, rich countries need wood and consume too many wood. The situation results in the poor countries’ environment getting worse and worse, and as a consequence, the whole world’s environment is getting worse and worse. Why don’t developed countries spend more money and efforts to help poor countries to improve the whole earth’s quality. A piece of forest in USA can’t save the whole world.

3. Doug | 01.05.09

Forests develop along a continuum from young to old. Where to draw the line defining old growth is somewhat arbitrary and/or depends on what purpose you have for drawing the line. One thing few would disagree with is that we have destroyed far too much of our old growth heritage and we need to protect what we have and restore much of what we’ve destroyed (especially given the great capacity of old forests to store carbon securely for a long time). Therefore, a more useful question is “which forest do we need to protect?” Dense young forests that were replanted after clearcutting might benefit from thinning to help diversify forest composition and structure, while mature forests contain all the building blocks for creating healthy old growth forests and should be retained and protected to provide a recruitment resource for future old growth and carbon stores.

4. JP | 01.09.09

Old-growth forests are amazing ecosystems with complex species interrelationships. It is humbling to walk through one of these sentinels of nature. All old-growth forests are beautiful, but particularly outstanding are the rare pockets of old-growth Cove Hardwoods of the southern Appalachians. Thanks CSM for your environmental reporting.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

Leave a Comment

  By clicking "Submit Comment", you agree to our Terms of Service.

We do not publish all comments, and we do not publish comments immediately. The comments feature is a forum to discuss the ideas in our stories. Constructive debate - even pointed disagreement - is welcome, but personal attacks on other commenters are not, and will not be published.

Tip: Do not write a novel. Keep it short. We will not publish lengthy comments. Come up with your own statements. This is not a place to cut and paste an email you received. If we recognize it as such, we won't post it.

Please do not post any comments that are commercial in nature or that violate copyrights.

Finally, we will not publish any comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence.