10A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2016 Giants: ‘This the template. You are among titans out here’ The Nature Conservancy has removed more than 20 miles of roads in the Ellsworth Creek watershed. Continued from Page 1A up parcels in Ellsworth Creek and is actively restoring more than 8,000 acres of contiguous former industrial forestland, some of which contains old- growth stands of cedar, spruce and the occasional Douglas ir. Dave Ryan is The Nature Conservancy’s boots-on-the ground forester. As a commer- cial forester, Ryan had man- aged clearcuts, replantings, thinnings and cases of blight. He’s seen harvest cycles shrink from 80 to 30 years. He’s seen plenty of change in forest man- agement over the years, most for the better, he says, such as stream buffers that help protect salmon runs. “Back in the day, the stream was your skid trail,” Ryan said, pointing toward a meandering stretch of creek he’s dubbed “Ellsworth Beach.” “They would just run machinery in the stream,” he said. “They’d run logs through and down it.” Hydraulic luid would end up in the water, stream beds would be gashed, and the scouring of log jams and wood from the creek eliminated much of the prime salmon hab- itat. But the land is resilient as it is productive. Gardens in the sky “There’s nothing wrong with a clearcut in and of itself,” Ryan said. “A clearcut is a tool in a land manager’s toolbox, but for some owners it’s the only tool. So if the one ham- mer they’ve got isn’t working, the answer is to get a bigger hammer.” If the goal of clearcut log- ging is to get as much wood out of the forest as possible, Ryan is in some ways now working in reverse. He hopes most of the trees he manages in Ellsworth will outlast him by at least a few lifetimes. Dozens of the giants somehow eluded the sol- diers’ saws, and Ryan estimates the age of some at more than 800 years. Those trees are inte- gral for endangered species like marbled murrelets, and Ells- worth is now the epicenter of those recovery efforts. Bounding from log to log like some kind of tac-booted Spiderman, Ryan casually describes a clearcut as having been “slicked off.” But then he’s just as likely to throw out a term like “vertical heteroge- neity” when describing The Nature Conservancy’s aspira- tions to return diversity to the forest; from the mycelium in Among titans David Plechl/EO Media Group Dave Ryan surveys a recently decommissioned road in the Ellsworth Creek preserve. Roads often have negative impacts on water quality, wildlife migrations and habitat. The Nature Conservancy has removed over 20 miles of road in the watershed. the soil, all the way up though the towering canopy, a world scientists are still exploring. Ryan says just a few years ago, an entirely new species of earthworm was discovered crawling in the arboreal soils on ancient limbs of Ellsworth old growth. “It was living in these gardens in the sky,” he said. Restoration is not just about keeping the chainsaws out and leaving things as they are. The patchwork of forests that make up the preserve are all at differ- ent stages of growth, and most relect the unnaturally dense monoculture plantings of the industrial timber model. “We sort of took the water- shed out of its natural trajectory in terms of historic succession,” Ryan said. As a result, species like Sitka spruce, that were once plentiful in the Ellsworth Creek watershed are now mere “remnants.” Overabundant trees will be thinned out, and new plantings will add species diversity. “I’m optimistic,” Ryan said. He credits The Nature Conser- vancy’s director of forest con- servation and management, Dave Rolph, with dreaming up the ambitious Ellsworth resto- ration project. “I’m sure he cringes when I say this, but in many ways I consider Dave the godfather of Ellsworth,” Ryan said. “He’s kind of the reason this thing came together.” Godfather of Ellsworth In the late 1990s, Rolph ini- tiated a relatively modest pur- chase of land at Teal Slough THE DAILY ASTORIAN T UESDAY E VENING A (2) (-) (-) (6) (-) (8) (9) (10) (12) (13) (-) (20) (-) (29) (30) (31) (32) (34) (35) (36) (38) (39) (43) (44) (45) (46) (47) (48) (49) (50) (51) (52) (53) (54) (56) (57) (58) (61) (63) (64) (65) (162) L KATU KOMO KING KOIN KIRO KGW KRCW KOPB KPTV KPDX KCPQ TBS KZJO ESPN ESPN2 NICK DISN FAM FMC LIFE ROOT FS1 SPIKE COM HIST A&E TLC DISC NGEO TNT AMC USA FOOD HGTV FX CNN FNC CNBC BRAV TCM SYFY RFD (2) (4) (5) (-) (7) (-) (3) (10) (12) (-) (13) (20) (22) (29) (30) (31) (32) (34) (35) (36) (38) (39) (43) (44) (45) (46) (47) (48) (49) (50) (51) (52) (53) (54) (56) (57) (58) (61) (63) (64) (65) (162) 6 near the Naselle River Bridge after the Paul Allen Founda- tion gave money speciically for the purpose of old-growth restoration. While surveying that pur- chase, Rolph learned of another stand of big trees along Ells- worth Creek and decided it was worth a look. “What we essen- tially discovered was that there was a lot more than just an old- growth stand there,” Rolph said. The stream already boasted a booming chum salmon run. There was a stable marbled murrelet population, and the highest known diversity of amphibians anywhere in Wash- ington state. “If you really want to pro- tect those things,” Rolph said, “just protecting that one stand of old growth wouldn’t do it.” He said that’s when the greater vision for the long- term restoration project started to come together. The Nature Conservancy would patch together multiple parcels, and bring the entire watershed under its management. Additional parcels were added between 2001 and 2005 as The Nature Conser- vancy worked primarily with two major land owners — the Campbell Group and John Han- cock, both major lumber con- sortiums. A handful of smaller landowners also sold parcels to the conservancy. Rolph said for the most part, old-growth ecosystems make up less than 1 percent of for- ests in southwest Washing- ton. He said the majority of old growth lives in national parks or national forests, and there aren’t a lot of either in this cor- ner of the state. “You can’t go out and buy it,” Rolph said. “If you really want an old-growth ecosystem, you have to restore it.” Roads and toads But even before biologists and preservationists could get their boots muddy, The Nature Conservancy irst had to come up with a plan. They formed a scientiic panel of top North- west scientists. “We went through all potential alternatives,” Rolph explained, “what science could tell us, and what science couldn’t.” After much deliberation, The Nature Conservancy set- tled on a slightly experimental route — the restoration would be managed in three distinct treatment areas with the long- run goal of inding the best mode of restoration and then adapting the overall approach. Rolph said a series of streams that roll down from Bear River Ridge naturally split the basin into three smaller trib- utary basins. One basin will be “actively” managed, another “passively” managed, and the third will be a “control.” The restoration activi- ties are much more intense in the actively managed section, Rolph said, where thinning of smaller trees should encourage the development of old growth. Roads are also removed alto- gether or rerouted away from slide-prone areas. In the passively managed section, there is no timber har- vest, but roads are removed, then Mother Nature is left to her own devices. The control area is more or less left com- pletely “as is,” and that data will be used to compare the impacts being made in the active and passive areas of restoration. When managing forest and stream health, a lot of people think about trees and salmon, says Ryan, but the impact of roads on the ecosystem can’t be underestimated. They have huge effects on water quality, wildlife migrations and habitat. As Ryan, the forester, checks in on some recent road decommissions in Ellsworth, he says there is more to road removal than just letting nature run its course. Building roads is heavy-duty work and removing them is equally intense. Roads that cut across slopes create slide hazards, channel sediment into streams and dam up sub- surface water lows. The watershed is a web of perennial streams, sea- sonal streams and culverts, and, “there’s a lot of water that comes down,” Ryan said, “and it doesn’t just relegate itself to those channels.” Roads also create for- est edges, where the effects of wind and sun are magniied. Microclimates produced may be counterproductive. Amphib- ians may be discouraged from crossing a dry rocky road, and the continuous clearings expose hidden murrelet nests to crows that eat the eggs before they hatch. LISTINGS A - Charter Astoria/ Seaside - L - Charter Long Beach The restoration project comes down to three basic components — selective thin- ning and planting, moving or removing roads, and intensive in-stream restoration. Most of the land in the con- servation area has been logged repeatedly. And after a typi- cal clearcut, Rolph said, “the forest comes back incredibly dense.” Under the guidance of Ryan’s work on the ground, The Nature Conservancy con- tract crews harvest some of the more plentiful Douglas ir and hemlock to encour- age more space for spruce and cedar to succeed. Rather than a few dominant species, the balance should be struck by complexity. In the active basin, Ryan said the conservancy is “work- ing the land with restoration in mind.” That means taking out smaller trees that crowd strong trees that aid diversity. The har- vested trees are sold to mar- ket and the proceeds are cycled back into more restoration efforts. “We pay for our operating costs with our timber revenue,” Ryan said. Thinning requires just the right touch to get the most out of recovering forest ecosys- tems. Trees support each other. Where roots intertwine stands are more resilient to the effects of wind. “If you hit it too hard, it becomes a little more sus- ceptible to wind throw,” Ryan said. “So we’re saying you can thin it, you just have to be more thoughtful with your approach.” Part of Ryan’s job is to share what The Nature Con- servancy is doing with others. Forest managers have come from as far as Chile to study the project. He often leads vis- itors down a rough-hewn trail that descends from one of the old logging roads into a gully of giant spruce; their gnarled trunks twisting high above any- thing else in the forest. “I call those the guardians,” Ryan mused. He doesn’t know how they escaped the ax, but said a few hundred acres of Ellsworth are spiked with the towering beauties. “This the template,” Ryan said, gazing upward. “You are among titans out here.” Evening listings TUESDAY A UGUST 23 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 KATU News at 6 Jeopardy! 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