November 6, 2015 CapitalPress.com 3 Biologists: Taking wolves off Oregon’s endangered species list By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press The wildlife biologists in charge of Oregon’s gray wolf recovery program believe wolves should be taken off the state endangered species list. The recommendation goes to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Commis- sion, which will decide Nov. 9 whether to delist wolves. Livestock producers, especial- ly those represented by the Or- egon Cattleman’s Association, favor delisting. Conservation groups op- pose the idea. In a joint state- ment released Oct. 29, the Pacific Wolf Coalition said the staff recommendation is flawed and has not been peer reviewed as required by state law. The coalition includes Oregon Wild, Cascadia Wild- lands and the Center for Bio- logical Diversity. Michael Paul Nelson, a College of Forestry professor Courtesy of ODFW OR-3, a three-year-old male wolf from the Imnaha pack, is shown in this image captured from video taken by an ODFW employee on May 10, 2011, in Wallowa County, Ore. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Commission, which will decide Nov. 9 whether to delist wolves. of environmental ethics and philosophy at Oregon State University, called delisting “logically indefensible” when wolves are present on only 12 percent of their potential range in the state. “Dropping state protections for wolves right now would suggest that politics, rather than science and law, are guid- ing wildlife management deci- sions in Oregon,” Nelson said in a statement issued by Pacific Wolf Coalition. ODFW disagrees. “We have reviewed and used documented and verifi- able information to formulate our results,” ODFW spokes- woman Michelle Dennehy said. “We are confident in our process and that we are follow- ing statutory and regulatory re- quirements.” If the ODFW commission agrees with the staff recom- mendation, it would mean wolves in the eastern third of the state are not protected un- der either state or federal en- dangered species laws. Federal ESA protection would still be in force in the rest of Oregon. That wouldn’t mean open season on wolves, however. The state wolf plan would re- main in force, and it allows ODFW-approved “controlled take,” or killing, of wolves in cases of chronic livestock attacks or if wolves cause a decline in prey populations, chiefly elk and deer. Ranchers, as they do now, would be able to shoot wolves caught in the act of attacking livestock or herd dogs. None have been killed in that manner. Oregon’s wolf plan does not allow sport hunting of wolves in any phase of the recovery timeline, Dennehy said. The ODFW staff recom- mendation was not a surprise. A biological status review completed earlier this fall said gray wolf recovery in Oregon has met the delisting criteria in every instance. Under the state plan, wolves can be delisted if: Wolves aren’t in danger of extinction in any portion of their range; their natural repro- ductive potential is not in dan- ger of failing; there’s no immi- nent or active deterioration of their range or primary habitat; the species or its habitat won’t be “over-utilized” for scientific, recreational, commercial or ed- ucational reasons; and existing state or federal regulations are adequate to protect them. State wildlife biologists, headed by ODFW’s Russ Mor- gan, believe the criteria have been met. Morgan describes Oregon’s wolf population as steadily increasing in number and geographic distribution. The first wolves migrated to Oregon from Idaho, where they had been released as part of a national recovery program coordinated by U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The first Or- egon pack was documented in 2008, and the confirmed wolf population stood at 85 as of July 2015. Since then, three wolves have died: The Sled Springs pair were found dead of unknown cause in Wallowa County in late August, and a Grant County man hunting coyotes on private property in early October reported shoot- ing a wolf designated as OR- 22. A district attorney is re- viewing evidence in the case. The Nov. 9 ODFW Com- mission meeting begins at 8 a.m. at the department head- quarters, 4034 Fairview In- dustrial Drive SE, Salem. Wolf delisting is the only topic on the agenda. Saving an apple orchard may graft an industry’s growth By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press MOLALLA, Ore. — On a modest farm southeast of Portland, volunteers nurture thousands of cuttings taken from a world class collection of obscure apple varieties. Their goal is to copy the eclectic collection and sustain its genetic diversity before its aging owner retires, sells or the collection falls into disarray. The volunteers, roused through such groups as the Home Orchard Society, have found unexpected allies: Hip- ster hard cider makers, whose booming industry seeks the bitter-sweet or even bitter-tart flavors of old heirloom apples, not the Honeycrisp, Fuji or the half-dozen other fresh-eating varieties most commonly sold in grocery stores. “The cider makers have found the older varieties pro- duce the complex, multi-lay- ered flavors they need,” said Joanie Cooper, who owns the Molalla farm where the orchard collection is being established. “The new ones are just sweet and don’t add character to ci- der.” “All of this makes sense,” said Pete Mulligan, a key project supporter and partner in Bull Run Cider outside of Portland. “This is the fastest growing adult beverage in the country.” At the root of this collabo- ration is the renowned Botner Collection in Yoncalla, Ore., which was established by am- ateur horticulturist Nick Botner and his wife, Carla. Trading and exchanging with other pri- vate and public collectors over A late-setting variety labeled “Huvitus” is among the apple trees copied from the renowned but eclectic Nick Botner collection in Southern Oregon. The Temperate Orchard Conservancy, a non- profit, is copying the collection to sustain genetic diversity. Photos by Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Joanie Cooper, owner of Almaty Farm in Molalla, Ore., leads The Temperate Orchard Conservancy’s effort to copy the Botner apple tree collection, which includes up to 4,000 varieties. several decades, Nick Botner gathered an estimated 4,000 apple varieties from around the world, including from old pio- neer homesteads in the U.S. He grows them on his farm. But the farm is for sale. Cooper, who’s long been active in the Home Orchard Society, said Botner, near 90, told her, “You need to buy my farm. Move down here and save my trees.” That wasn’t feasible. In ad- dition, Cooper said the farm is not commercially viable, be- cause in many cases Botner has only one tree per variety. In 2011, intending to pre- serve the genetic diversity represented in the Botners’ or- chard, Cooper and others set out to duplicate it. In 2012, Cooper formed a nonprofit, the Temperate Or- chard Conservancy, and began the effort to plant the copied varieties on Almaty Farm, her 40-acre property outside of Molalla. Cooper said the farm will distribute cuttings to other orchardists. “We have big and broad plans,” she said. “This isn’t go- ing to be a static collection.” It is tedious work. Vol- unteers take cuttings, called scions, and graft them to root stock. They’re grown out in pots under shade cloth before being planted at Cooper’s farm. The nonprofit eventually will take over the property, Cooper said. Down the road, the con- servancy may be able to help support itself by selling trees. Each tree wears a metal tag with identification drawn from Botner’s eclectic records: Com- mon name, planting block and row number. The varieties range from Muscaset de Lense, a French cider apple, to Huvitus, which originated in Finland. Others are identified as Glass King, Lyman Prolific, Kensei, Har- lamowski, Joy’s Delight and Marlin Stephens. “Most of these, you wouldn’t know what they are,” Cooper said. So far, volunteers have cop- ied about 3,000 of the estimated 4,000 varieties in the collection. The USDA maintains an apple variety collection in Ge- neva, N.Y., but the Botner col- lection holds some that aren’t found there. Cooper said the conservancy has a different mission. “They have a collection, but their goal is not to save every heirloom variety,” Cooper said. “Ours is.” The work wins cheers from Joseph Postman, who curates the USDA’s pear collection out- side of Corvallis, Ore. Grocery chains primarily sell four or five apple varieties, and lack of diversity is a genet- ic vulnerability, Postman said. Having access to hundreds opens the market to local prod- ucts, he said. The alcoholic fruit drink in- dustry is pushing the renewed interest in varieties that aren’t widely grown commercially, Postman said. Over the past dozen years, most of the re- quests Postman’s received for pear cuttings come from “per- ry” makers. Perry is to pears as cider is to apples. At Bull Run Cider in For- est Grove out side of Portland, Mulligan and partner Galen Williams make hard cider, maintain their own orchard and sell trees to other orchard- ists. It’s critical the industry grow its own cider varieties as soon as possible, Mulligan said. Some cideries now make do with juiced dessert apples, he said. Cooper, the nonprofit Tem- perate Orchard Conservancy founder and owner of Almaty Farm, said her interest began when she realized the rural property she owned years ago near Amity, Ore., had remnants of an orchard planted in the late 1880s. She sought identi- fication and was entranced by the long-forgotten varieties. She’s transplanted that fer- vor to her new farm, Amaty. The farm name comes from a city in Kazakhstan and report- edly means “full of apples.” The region is often described as the birthplace of modern apples, and so the name ap- peals to Cooper. “That’s what I call it,” she said. El Nino’s warm and wet winter could impact 2016 prune crop, insider warns YUBA CITY, Calif. — El Nino conditions are already threatening prune production in Chile and could do the same in California, an industry in- sider warns. Along with fueling Hurri- cane Patricia’s recent assault on the Mexican coast, El Nino has brought ongoing rain and cloudy weather in Chile during the spring growing season, notes Greg Thompson, general manager of the Prune Bargain- ing Association. The weather phenomenon marked by warm southern storms casts doubt on Califor- nia’s 2016 crop, as warm and wet conditions increase the likelihood of disease problems in fruit production, Thompson asserts. California and Chile to- gether account for 80 percent of the world’s dried plum pro- duction. While a downturn in production could push prices up, “we found out this year that things can happen globally you didn’t expect,” Thompson told the Capital Press. “Several of the internation- al markets for South America — like Russia and Brazil — are having economic problems and imports are way off,” he said. “Prices were up last year because there really was a global shortfall in production. When prices go up, there’s a shift in the supply-and-de- mand curve.” Scientists have said this winter’s El Nino could turn out to be as strong as 1997- 98, which resulted in severe weather and flooding in many areas of the United States. Prune producers that season were expecting a 170,000-ton crop, but the rain and gloomy skies that extended into the summer led to a crop of only 102,000 tons. A warm early spring this year diminished fruit sizes in California, leading to an esti- mated 100,000-ton crop, down 4 percent from the 104,000 tons pulled from dryers in 2014, according to the Na- tional Agricultural Statistics Service. A big crop in South Ameri- can in 2014-15 combined with the economic slump to put downward pressure on prices, Thompson said. If money is tight, some growers may want to cut back on “cultural inputs” such as pruning, fertilizers and fungicides, but such cutbacks could lead to disaster in a warm and wet winter, he said. Grower should “just try to keep a good, healthy orchard as best you can and try to weather the storm,” he said. Formed in 1968, the Prune Bargaining Association is a grower-owned cooperative that negotiates with buyers to establish the industry’s raw product price for prunes. H-B SYSTEM 2000 HORIZONTAL BALE CUTTING SAW The heavy duty, hydraulically powered horizontal Bale Reclaim system, with “Vertical cut positioning” SALVAGE ED BALES CONTAMINAT COST- QUICKLY AND EFFECTIVELY • The HB System 2000 comes complete with hydraulic cylinder and controls for powered cut depth adjustment through the cut. • Automatic bar oiler system is a standard feature on this unit. • This saw splits bales using an L-M DE-68 inch saw bar running .404 pitch chain designed for parallel cutting through any type of hay or straw. 45-2/#7 Capital Press 45-4/#8 By TIM HEARDEN