Commentary U.S. Forest Service should save spotted owls Within the next few weeks, the U.S. Forest Service will begin to determine the fate of one of the most beautiful and rare birds in the Pacific Nor thwest, the northern spotted owl. Twelve management pro posals. ranging from nothing to total protection, are under con sideration. and the Forest Ser vice is presently soliciting public comment on its alter natives. This may be the last chance for individuals to make their voices heard in this decision-making process, which will shape the direction of land use in the forests of the Northwest for many years. By Steve Albert The northern spotted owl (strix occidontalis caurina) is a . .""'i German AUTO SERVICE VW’S MERCEDES BMW’S DATSUN TOYOTA mkabm mwci iot your tormgn cm “Sine* 1963" Z0Z5 Frankin t#vd Euo*r» Or* 97403 Bus Ph 342-2912 SECURITY FIRST Child Development Center Close to U ot O Small home-!** setting. 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According to official Forest Service data, the Willamette Na tional Forest has more spotted owls than any other region in the world. All recent biological data con clude that the spotted owl's population has been declining and will continue to decline as the old-growth forests on which it depends are cut. Old growth dominates 98 percent of the sites where the owls are found in Oregon, according to Foreman. The Forest Service reports that 40.000 acres of spotted owl habitat are destroyed annually. (Old growth is typically defined as trees aged 200-1.000 plus years.) Kighty percent of the old growth that was here only 25 years ago is gone, and perhaps only 2 percent remains of what was here when the first settlers arrived. As the old growth falls, so —UO Bookstore— Give someone a buzz. Telephone SALE this week. 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The National Forest Manage ment Act requires by law that the Forest Service "maintain viable populations of existing native vertebrate species" and "insure continued existence is well distributed." Yet the Forest Service is not an agency of conservationists. They are largely in the business of tree farming, and to a frightening degree, seemingly at the behest of the timber interests. Some Forest Service pro posals advocate setting aside only 300 acres per mating pair of owls (less than one-thirtieth of their potential required home range). Fven the F'orest Ser vice's "preferred alternative" would, by their own estimates, spell probable extinction for the owl within 100 years. The time has come to stop thinking of our natural resources as discrete elements from which we can choose what we want to exploit, allowing the remainder to wither away. Con servationist and author, Aldo Leopold, wrote more than 40 years ago, “You cannot love game and hate predators. You cannot conserve the waters and waste the ranges. The land is one organism. Its parts, like our parts, compete and cooperate with each other." This is much more of an issue than a few owls versus a few timber jobs. A weaning away from a heavy dependence on lumber would diversify the state's ailing economy as well as keep it the beautiful place we all love to live in. These national forests are your land, not the Forest Ser vice's. Tell them what you want. CASIO CZ-1000 DIGITAL SYNTHESIZER