Petition
to STOP the Breaking Bud Timber Sale
To Chair Franz and the Board of Natural Resources:
The undersigned urge you to cancel DNR's "Breaking Bud" timber sale, located on the Kitsap Peninsula, just above Tahuya Lake, in the Tahuya River watershed.
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Almost all of the natural and old growth forests that once dominated the Kistap Peninsula and South Puget Sound lowland ecoregion have been logged. Lowland watersheds are now mostly industrial forestlands, and agricultural fields. It is important to protect the few remaining, natural "legacy" forests that are left. These forests are an important part of our natural heritage, and function as natural climate refugia, and ecological "lifeboats" for a wide variety of plant and wildlife species, and hundreds of lesser-known species of insects, lichens, bryophytes, mushrooms, and other fungi.
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Natural legacy forests like those found in "Unit 1" of the "Breaking Bud" timber sale are different from other managed (or planted) forests in a number of ways. The most obvious difference is that the trees are much larger than in managed forests. Some of the dominant trees in Unit 1 of this timber sale measure more than three feet in diameter and are over 160 feet tall. Because these forests were often selectively logged or "high-graded" in the early 1900's, and allowed to grow back on their own, they are also much more structurally and biologically diverse.
Walk through this forest, and you will find it contains multiple canopy layers, composed of a wide variety of trees of different sizes. Gaps in the overstory canopy allow sunlight to reach the forest floor, creating a complex mosaic of different plant communities composed of a diverse array of small trees, shrubs, mushrooms, and wildflowers. Standing dead trees and logs provide critical nesting habitat for small mammals, and countless other forms of life.
This forest provides learning opportunities for students, and is a popular recreational destinations for hunters, hikers, bikers, and other outdoor enthusiasts. Older forests like this also absorb more carbon from the atmosphere per acre than any other forests in the world, thus slowing the rate of climate change.
There is no defense for logging our last remaining legacy forests. DNR forest inventory records reveal that there are thousands of acres of plantation forests managed by DNR in Kitsap County that are currently available for harvest. Plantation forests hold more than enough timber to satisfy overall sustainable harvest targets for the current planning decade, and fulfill DNR's current commitments to generate revenue for the county and its junior taxing districts. There is no need to clearcut this forest. To be clear, the recommendation by Commissioner of Public Lands and the Department of Natural Resources to clear-cut this forest is a choice that is made by the Commissioner and DNR. DNR is not fulfilling a mandate or following best available science by logging this rare, century-old forest.
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We are not asking DNR to end logging on state forest lands. We simply asking that you protect the last best remaining lowland legacy forests, which occupy less than ten percent of all state forest lands in the South Puget Sound region. Please put a stop to the destruction of these irreplaceable forests and cancel the "Breaking Bud" sale.
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