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David Lindenmayer Long-term Forest Science, Fires, Human disturbance & a vision for management
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This talk ANU Background The wet forests of Victoria The current state of these forests Restoring these forests A new vision for forest management
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Specialise in large-scale, l0ng-term ecological research and monitoring thru ANU 37 other staff, students etc – funded thru grants, book royalties etc 37 books, 920 scientific articles, 53 “live” (current) projects
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The wet forests of Central Victoria (171 200 ha)
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The Central Highlands of Victoria
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Most of Melbourne’s water (4.5m people – largest city by 2020)
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Up to 1700 tonnes of carbon biomass per ha (Keith et al., 2009; PNAS; Keith et al., 2014; Ecosphere) WORLD’S MOST CARBON DENSE FORESTS
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Leadbeater’s Possum Endangered species Faunal emblem of Victoria Only occurs in these forests
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Natural disturbance regime – rare, high-severity, stand- replacing (or partial replacing fire)
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2009 “Black Saturday” wildfires 173 lives lost >16 000 properties damaged 72 000 ha of 171 200 ha of ash forest burned Worst fires in Australia wrt human fatalities and infrastructure impact……..
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Human use = Logging provides (372 direct) jobs
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Greater than 31 years of science: (since 1983…….) Greater than 31 years of science: (since 1983…….) 7 books (+5/8) 187 peer-reviewed scientific papers (+7) >1, 800,000 scientific measurements since 1983 2009 2011
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The current state of the forest IUCN Red Listed Ecosystem – Critically Endangered (Burns et al. 2014 [Austral Ecology]
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The forest has been massively altered in the last 50-100 years 1.16% Mountain Ash (1887 ha of 171 200 ha) 0.37% Alpine Ash Remaining Old Growth forest (was 30-60% historically) 72,000 ha Mountain Ash burned in 2009
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Spatial cover by history and disturbance
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Marys ville Heales ville
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ANU monitoring plots
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2009 fire
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2009 fire and ANU plots
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TRP plus Logging history (total)
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2009 fire
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2009 plus 1983 fire
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How has this happened?
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Modern (extensive & intensive) clearfelling
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BIODIVERSITY
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The current reserve system is inadequate (Todd et al. 2014) Leadbeater’s Possum is on an extinction trajectory
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Overall decline Old growth cover has declined by 95-97% of “background” cover levels (1/30 th -1/60 th ) Large old trees = 90% decline in total abundance by 2035
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Mis-match between tree loss and animal needs
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FIRE (New work by Taylor et al [2014] (in Conservation Letters)
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Logging elevates fire severity (Taylor et al. 2014)
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Repeated fire – fire burns young forest and keeps it young with subsequent re-burning (A fire in a young forest is different to a fire in an old forest)
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Cumulative logging + fire effects across landscapes
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LANDSCAPE TRAP (Forest is trapped as a young forest because of recurrent widespread fire – and never matures)
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CARBON
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The world’s most carbon dense forests
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decomposition Total biomass carbon in forest ecosystem 100% Merchantable biomass removed off-site 40% Waste or slash remaining 60% CWD remaining on-site 30% ~50 yrs slash burning Sawlogs 11% Pulp 29% waste Sawn timber 4% 30-90yrs Paper products 20% 1-3yrs Landfill decomposition combustion CO 2 Proportions of carbon from Mountain Ash forest going to pulp and sawlog products and remaining on coupe (Keith et al., 2013) Fate of carbon in harvested forest
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Logging and carbon stocks Reduction from ~800 to 300 tonnes/ha [Keith et al., 2014 – Ecosphere] 100,000 ha of Mountain Ash for carbon 24,500,000 tonne saving in carbon emissions – 1/3 rd of Yallourn Power Station annually Equivalent of 750,000 – 1,000,000 ha of replanted woodland
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Forest restoration and management strategies
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Essential to “re-build” and restore the Mountain Ash forest estate For biodiversity For fire management For carbon storage For water supply For economic benefits via tourism
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Prevent Extinction of endangered species
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To regrow old trees and old growth
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To limit future fire risk
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Plantations = alternative feedstock More than 2X sufficient plantations to provide feedstock for paper production Plantation is actually preferred feedstock Has positive carbon abatement potential
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WATER
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Water values of old ash forest Old growth yields more water Water value >> pulp (via desal pricing) Water for 4.5M people
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TOURISM
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Major benefits for local and regional economies
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How many people? 4+ million residents in Melbourne 14 million domestic visitors per year in 2009 1.4 million international visitors in 2009
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Tahune Airwalk, Geeveston Tarkine Forest Adventures Hollybank, Underwood Eagles Eyrie, Maydena National Park eco tourism in Tasmania
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Milford Track, New Zealand
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Think about the infrastructure Walking tracks (serious and semi-serious) Ziplines Aerial walkways Facilities for grey nomads, backpackers, high- end tourism
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Thank you
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