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- From: mcgrath@cs.uiuc.edu (Robert McGrath)
- Subject: Re: does this sound right?
- Message-ID: <C1Gwpr.2AK@cs.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: news@cs.uiuc.edu
- Reply-To: mcgrath@cs.uiuc.edu
- Organization: University of Illinois, Dept of Computer Science
- References: <1993Jan23.4286.31987@dosgate> <C1F8Dq.5KE@cs.uiuc.edu> <1993Jan25.222902.6230@newshost.lanl.gov>
- Distribution: sci
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 15:37:02 GMT
- Lines: 70
-
- In article <1993Jan25.222902.6230@newshost.lanl.gov>, jlg@cochiti.lanl.gov (J. Giles) writes:
- |> In article <C1F8Dq.5KE@cs.uiuc.edu>, mcgrath@cs.uiuc.edu (Robert McGrath) writes:
- |> |> In article <1993Jan23.4286.31987@dosgate>, "dan mckinnon" <dan.mckinnon@canrem.com> writes in part:
- |> |> |> The "gone forever" part gives me more trouble, unless every acre is
- |> |> |> on a mountainside and quickly devastated by erosion, or unless third
- |> |> |> world countries are erecting shopping malls at an alarming rate.
- |> |>
- |> |> Got it on the second try (at least in the Amazon basin). The soil
- |> |> of the forest pretty much turns to useless muck in about two years
- |> |> after the trees are cleared. The forests do not grow back. Nothing
- |> |> much grows at all, especially if cattle are grazed on it.
- |> |>
- |> |> And in the case of ANY primary growth forest, clearing it out
- |> |> is permanent. Even if a secondary growth forest develops (after
- |> |> decades) it is NOT the same kind of forest, and much of the life
- |> |> that lives there is gone forever. Lots of trees is not the same
- |> |> thing as a climax forest ecology. Compare, for instance, the
- |> |> unlogged forests of Oregon with the secondary growth in, say,
- |> |> Michigan, which was logged out about 1910.
- |>
- |> It's a little misleading to compare the Amazon basin to, say, Oregon.
- |> In Oregon, many of the "old growth" forests are on the sites of recent
- |> (less than a thousand years) complete devastation by volcanic activity.
- |> Yes, the forests regrew.
-
- Hmm. I hadn't realized that the entire forest on the West Coast was
- something like 1000 years old. That must have been one heck of a volcano
- to wipe out enough forest to be compared to large scale human clearing.
-
- And, of course, 1000 years is effectively forever in terms of human
- lifetimes. Somehow, the idea that, if we mow down a forest, a new
- one might grow back just as good a few hundred years after I'm dead
- (assuming nobody messes it up) is pretty much the same as being
- gone forever.
-
- |> And, only 90 years is
- |> a little too short an interval (in forest terms) make any firm conclusions
- |> about whether the Michigan forests can or will regrow.
-
- The forest that is regrowing in Michigan is a completely different forest
- that was there originally. There is almost no chance at all that it
- will ever grow back the way it was. In that sense, the original forest
- is definitely gone forever.
-
- |> How much forest can be cut and what policies should be in place to best
- |> encourage recovery and renewal of the resource are questions about which
- |> a lot is known, but not nearly enough to make absolute positive claims.
- |> The present state of knowledge leaves a lot of room for wildly different
- |> opinions between equally well-informed scientists. You could argue that
- |> cutting down "old growth" forests before the above questions (and others)
- |> have been answered is irresponsible. On the other hand, depriving people
- |> of an important source of income during a recession because of problems
- |> that only *may* occur could also be characteized as irresponsible. Welcome
- |> to the wonderful world of politics.
-
- I agree that management policy is a political question, and that
- deforestation is driven by pretty raw economic forces. (You forgot
- to note the economic interest of the tourist industry, which requires
- un-logged forests.)
-
- I should note that the Amazon deforestation has often been done by
- a relatively few, who level a large area (basically wasting the lumber),
- use it for a couple of years to grow cash crops for export (rather
- than food or improving the domestic economy) and then abandon it.
- This kind of activity is not great policy in anybody's book.
-
- --
- Robert E. McGrath
- Urbana Illinois
- mcgrath@cs.uiuc.edu
-