FRESNO, Calif. -- Federal authorities have delayed a major forest-thinning project because new research suggests the work could harm the weasel-like Pacific fisher.By late March, Sierra National Forest officials plan revisions to further protect the sensitive fisher in the Kings River Project, about 13,000 acres east of Fresno. The project plan, which had been approved in 2006 after more than a decade of work, could be ready again this fall.The delay pleased environmentalists but disappointed a Tulare County sawmill executive who says he needs timber from the area to keep his 125 employees working. Kent Duysen, general manager of Sierra Forest Products, said sensitive species have been studied for two decades."At what point do you say we need to move on?" he asked.Environmentalists, who last year sued to stop the project, said the U.S. Forest Service is correct to move cautiously."We need to deal with the fire risk without doing more harm," said Craig Thomas, executive director of Sierra Forest Legacy, a coalition of groups dedicated to protecting forests.Forest officials said the new fisher research was completed after the project's approval in December 2006. The research shows the animal needs more larger, older trees and more of a canopy overhead than officials had anticipated."At the time the plan was approved, we didn't know when the new research would be available," said Sue Exline, spokeswoman for the Sierra National Forest.The research was done by forest service scientists and a private, nonprofit group called the Conservation Biology Institute, based in Oregon.The fisher is a focus of great environmental concern south of Yosemite National Park in such places as the Kings River Project area. It has disappeared in the Sierra Nevada north of Yosemite all the way to the Cascades.The loss of fishers has been blamed on logging and trapping. The animal has been a candidate for listing under the Endangered Species Act, but the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service does not have the money to offer protection.But now wildfire is among the biggest threats to the fisher and other sensitive species, such as the California spotted owl.The goal of the Kings River Project has been to mimic the open pine forest that existed in 1850. At that time, the forest was dominated by large trees. Small, lightning-sparked fires regularly cleared out brush and small trees without killing big trees.Decades of fire suppression have left the Sierra's forests overgrown with brush and small trees, making them susceptible to destructive wildfires.Thomas of Sierra Forest Legacy does not argue against the use of chain saws to thin the forest. But for years, he has said the Forest Service planned to remove too many large trees in the Kings River Project and jeopardize the fisher."The logging in this plan was way more intensive than it should have been," he said.Mark Grossi can be reached at mgrossi(at)fresnobee.com. For more stories visit scrippsnews.com
Latest Stories
By JIM ALEXANDER, The Press-Enterprise
By DAVID MOULTON , Scripps Howard News Service
By ISADORA RANGEL, Scripps Howard News Service
By LUKE DeCOCK, Raleigh News and Observer
By SCOTT OSTLER, San Francisco Chronicle
By HELAINE FENDELMAN and JOE ROSSON, Scripps Howard News Service
Scripps Howard News Service
By MAUREEN GILMER, Scripps Howard News Service
By JOE LAMP'L, Scripps Howard News Service
By JOHN M. CRISP, Scripps Howard News Service
By DAN WALTERS, Sacramento Bee
By ROSEMARY SADEZ FRIEDMANN, Scripps Howard News Service
By PATTI EWALD, Tampa Bay Times
By MARY CAROL GARRITY, Scripps Howard News Service
By ED DEL GRANDE, Scripps Howard News Service
By DWIGHT BARNETT, Scripps Howard News Service
By DENA FISHBEIN, Scripps Howard News Service
By SARAH WELCH and ALICIA ROCKMORE, getbuttonedup.com
By CARL NOLTE, San Francisco Chronicle
By TIM GRANT, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- 1 of 2393
- ››
Pacific fisher stalls forest thinning project
Paying taxes unites us. It also divides us. People can pay five and even six times more in state and local taxes than other folks in similar circumstances making similar incomes.
Who's got your number?
In one of the fastest-growing forms of identity theft, crooks are stealing tax refunds by swiping personal information and using it to trick the Internal Revenue Service.




ShareThis





