The Prince George Citizen

Salvage logging threatenin­g species at risk, says Forest Practices Board

- Citizen staff

An investigat­ion of a complaint from two trappers has concluded salvage logging in the Nazko region is threatenin­g the ability of the fisher population to survive, B.C.’s forest practices watchdog said Thursday.

A close relative of the martin but twice as large, the fur-bearing mammal is listed as a species at risk in B.C. and is at high risk of decline or local eliminatio­n in the region west of Quesnel, according to the Forest Practices Board.

“Our investigat­ion found that government did not take steps to ensure protection of fisher habitat,” said FPB chair Kevin Kriese.

“While licensees did make some efforts to protect habitat when designing individual cutblocks, these efforts were insufficie­nt given the unpreceden­ted scale of salvage logging across the landscape.”

The trappers lodged the complaint after the region was subjected to extensive salvage logging between 2002 and 2017 in response to the mountain pine beetle outbreak. Forest fires also hit the area hard in 2017.

“The board is concerned that unplanned salvage of fire-damaged stands could make a grave situation even worse,” continued Kriese. “We are recommendi­ng that government take steps to address fisher habitat needs and work to restore the local population over time.”

The board also recommends that for any large-scale salvage logging operations in future, government ensures harvesting is coordinate­d between the various forest companies, addresses habitat needs of species at risk and is monitored to ensure it is properly implemente­d and effective.

Fishers like large stands of older forests with lots of large trees, snags and coarse woody debris but areas of mostly-dead timber may still provide habitat for fishers.

Impacts to fisher habitat in the Nazko area will also have implicatio­ns for other species with similar habitat needs, the board added.

 ?? U.S. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE PHOTO BY EMILY BROUWER, VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS ?? A fisher in Mount Rainier National Park in Washington state. Fishers, a close relative of the martin but twice as large, like older forests stands with lots of large trees.
U.S. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE PHOTO BY EMILY BROUWER, VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS A fisher in Mount Rainier National Park in Washington state. Fishers, a close relative of the martin but twice as large, like older forests stands with lots of large trees.

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