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Healthy Forest Coalition

HFC Blog​​

What’s so bad about clearcuts?

5/31/2016

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More than 90% of the Crown forest leased by the Nova Scotia government for harvest is licensed for clearcut. 

That’s right, 90%. 

But, the province’s Natural Resources Strategy, The Path We Share, a dubious title, clearly states that the percentage of clearcutting is to be reduced to no more than 50% by 2016.  That’s this year. Now.

So how does this work?  90%.  50%.  Don’t ask the Healthy Forest Coalition for an explanation.  Ask the Minister of Natural Resources, the Honourable Lloyd Hines. 
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You can contact him here: 

Department of Natural Resources
3rd Floor, Founders Square
1701 Hollis Street
P.O. Box 698
Halifax, Nova Scotia B3J 2T9

 
Phone: (902) 424-4037
[email protected]a
...or at his Constituency Office
 
Chedabucto Center
9996 Highway 16
Unit P-1
PO Box 259
Guysborough, Nova Scotia B0H 1N0

 
Phone: (902) 533-2280
 
[email protected]
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Forests under Siege: What Will Happen to Nature? by Bob Bancroft
But, what’s so bad about clearcuts anyway?  Before you contact the Minister, you might want to download this short article, Scorched Earth, by the HFC's Bob Bancroft reprinted from Saltscapes (Vol. 12, #4, July-Aug, 2011)
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“Naked, thirsty and running a fever”: Our depleted forest soils

5/20/2016

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Acid Rain Map
Our soils are starved.

​Forest soils over 50 per cent of our landmass are losing more nutrients than are being replaced by rainfall or natural weathering of rocks.


Think acid rain. Our soils are shallow; they lie on slate, granite and felsic bedrock, and have no buffering capacity against industrial acid rain. Southwest Nova Scotia is in the worst shape.

Now think clear-fells. Clear-cutting worsens the effects of acid rain by increasing nutrient losses. Remove wood and bark, stems and stumps and the land is laid bare – open to erosion and further leaching. It’s a no-win situation.

​No climate issues, no food production concerns – whether sustainable agriculture, denuded energy resources, runaway climate change – can be fixed without addressing the issues of forest health because forest soils are the foundation for everything.

And that’s the thing. Our forests have a far higher and longer-term value than the crude market price placed on them by government. Productive soils, clean air, clean water, our social and economic well-being: all derive from healthy forests and a healthy forest floor. We need vision to sustain them, not the short-term asset stripping we see everywhere.

Biologist David Patriquin outlines the dismal story in this article from the Chronicle Herald.

​Briefly:
  1. Declines of salmon in our Atlantic river systems during the 1980s were traced to acid rain. This should have raised alarm bells about the uplands that fed our rivers.
  2. Nova Scotia has the poorest soils over the largest area in Eastern North America. In a nutshell, our forests have little buffering capacity to respond to acid rain.
  3. Massive clear-cutting of Nova Scotian forests has compounded the effects of acid rain by increasing nutrient losses. Clear-cutting in watersheds stressed by acid rain makes no sense. 

The price paid in the aquatic realm began upstream. Salmon, brook trout, loons, sugar maple, salamander, songbirds: the losses are too high. The points of the ecosystem triangle – complex interactions between soils, forests and the wider environment – no longer match up. Stay the course and the future is grim. Heed the science and at least we have a chance.

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Soil Depletion Notes, April 15, 2016 - David Patriquin
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  • Home
  • NS Forest News
  • MEDIA
  • PHOTOS
  • For The Birds
    • Migratory Birds in Nova Scotia
    • Migratory Birds Convention Act - Explained
  • HFC BLOG
  • ACTION
    • New Old Growth Forest Policy >
      • What Can I Do?
    • Support Biodiversity Act
    • Our current campaign
    • Our Mission and Our Story
    • How you can help: Speak up for our Forests
    • How to contact your MLA
    • Contact Us
  • The Moose Blockade
    • Ecojustice: Notes from Court
    • Gutted: The Habitat of the Endangered Mainland Moose
    • Mainland Moose in Nova Scotia
  • Resources
    • Clearcutting
    • Biomass
    • Soils
    • Water
    • Nature & Wildlife
    • Law & Policy
    • Forest Strategy
    • Economics
    • History
    • Natural Resources Strategy - Summary
  • HFC Supporters
  • HFC FOREST BRIEFINGS
  • ADVENTURES OF CARBON & NATURE
  • ARCHIVE - SUMMER 2020
  • ARCHIVE - Premier McNeil's Legacy
  • ARCHIVE - PAST NEWS 1
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  • ARCHIVE PAGE ONE
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