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Origins of Ecosystem Management
Hike any two-mile stretch of the Bartram Trail through the heart of the Chattooga
River watershed. You pass through and cross over the scars of an early environmental
crisis that began about 1880 and ended in 1920: old logging skid trails, still-rotting
stumps, pine stands delineating abandoned pastures, erosion gullies now healed
over with a hardwood forest, fire scars on 200-year old oaks. Here and there
you pass through a few acres of very old trees, relics of the old growth forest
that once covered the entire Chattooga watershed.
The uniqueness of the Chattooga River watershed is due largely to its great
diversity of elevations and land forms. From high elevation oak ridges and granite
dome communities to moist coves and riparian forests, about a dozen different
forest habitat types occur here, each with its own distinct combination of plants
and animals. All of this was very nearly destroyed in the turn-of-the-century
crisis. Only fragments of the original habitats remain intact.
The Southern Appalachian National Forests were established in 1920. "Land conservation"
and "watershed preservation" were the bywords of those days, and for the next
three decades forest management was limited largely to protection and restoration.
Today a mature forest has restored itself over much of the Chattooga River watershed,
not quite the same forest as before, but to modern conservationists this forest
is regaining much of its earlier natural character. The old wounds have begun
to heal, and it progresses slowly toward biological maturity.
Ironically, the rehabilitation of the Southern Appalachian forests has created
a modern day conflict. This forest in transition has now grown to commercial
size, and today timber extraction has replaced conservation as the top priority
for national forest management on most of the Chattooga River watershed. At
the same time, modern logging engineering has mastered the art of reaching every
commercial tree on the watershed, putting at risk even the remnants of old growth
forest that were too difficult to access a century ago.
Accelerated timber production over the past three decades, including the clear
cutting of old growth forests throughout the United States, has expanded the
logging versus conservation confrontation to every national forest in the country.
The turning point came in the early 1990s with the political, social, economic
and ecological conflict in the Pacific Northwest. A new image was clearly needed
for national forest management: a shift from the dominance of timber production
to something more palatable to the American public.
The term "ecosystem management" was born out of the Pacific Northwest crisis.
It was created by the U.S. Forest Service in 1992 to appeal to and appease all
factions. Ecosystem management was supposed to lead to a more reasonable dialog
between forest managers and the diverse public and private forest interests.
Although largely rebuked by the timber industry, ecosystem management has been
generally embraced by the scientific community, by most conservationists, and
by many foresters.
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