New timber sales delayed by plant and animal surveys Some species appear only every three to five years, making surveys difficult EUGENE — Federal timber sales are being delayed until next year in Oregon and Washington because surveys of old growth forests for 33 rare plants and ani mals have not been completed. Most of the species are fungi, snails and obscure plants that of ten appear only once every three to five years because of their irreg ular reproductive cycles. “The problem is, we have 33 species that we don’t even know how to identify, or they show up only sporadically,” said Greg Cox, head of a joint federal agency ef fort to develop guidelines for how to survey forests for rare plants and animals. The delay by the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Man agement is yet another blow to a logging program that already has been slashed by 80 percent under President Clinton’s Northwest forest plan. A Forest Service official said Tuesday that timber sales should start getting approval again by February, but any further delays could have a dramatic impact on i can’t get it it, what good is it? Email. While the-e’s no chance youf ever run out of it, there are times wher It but just can't get to it. Unless, like 20 million other email users, you have Hotmail is a free service that lets you get your email from any computer with web access. ft when you need it. Wt. Sign up for your free email account at www.hotmail.com. : sales in the 1999 federal fiscal year, which begins Thursday. Under Clinton’s forest plan, agencies were supposed to devel op these so-called “survey and manage” guidelines by Oct. 1. But the agencies won’t have guide lines for 33 species by Thursday’s deadline. from Mici