A3 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JULY 28, 2022 US to plant 1 billion trees as climate change kills forests Trees are a ‘sink’ for carbon dioxide By MATTHEW BROWN Associated Press BILLINGS, Mont. — The Biden administration said the government will plant more than a billion trees across mil- lions of acres of burned and dead woodlands in the U.S. West, as offi cials struggle to counter the increasing toll on the nation’s forests from wildfi res, insects and other manifestations of climate change. Destructive fi res in recent years that burned too hot for forests to regrow naturally have far outpaced the gov- ernment’s capacity to plant new trees. That has created a backlog of 4.1 million acres in need of replanting, offi - cials said. The U.S. Department of Agriculture said it will have to quadruple the number of tree seedlings produced by nurseries to get through the backlog and meet future needs. That comes after Con- gress last year passed bipar- tisan legislation directing the U.S. Forest Service to plant 1.2 billion trees over the next decade and after President Joe Biden in April ordered the agency to make the nation’s forests more resilient as the globe gets hotter. Much of the adminis- tration’s broader agenda to tackle climate change remains stalled amid disagreement in Congress, where Demo- crats hold a razor-thin major- ity. That has left offi cials to pursue a more piecemeal approach with incremen- tal measures such as Mon- day’s announcement, while the administration considers whether to declare a climate emergency that could open the door to more aggressive executive branch actions. To erase the backlog of decimated forest acreage, the Forest Service plans over the next couple years to scale up work from about 60,000 acres replanted last year to about 400,000 acres annually, offi cials said. Most of the work will be in Western states where wildfi res now occur year round and the need is most pressing, said David Lytle, the agency’s director of forest management. Blazes have charred 5.6 million acres so far in the U.S. this year, putting 2022 on track to match or exceed the record-setting 2015 fi re season, when 10.1 million acres burned. Many forests regenerate naturally after fi res, but if the blazes get too intense they Carlos Avila Gonzalez/San Francisco Chronicle Destructive fi res in recent years that burned too hot for forests to quickly regrow have far outpaced the government’s capacity to replant trees. can leave behind barren land- scapes that linger for decades before trees come back. “Our forests, rural com- munities, agriculture and economy are connected across a shared landscape and their existence is at stake,” Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said in a statement announcing the reforestation plan. “Only through bold, cli- mate-smart actions ... can we ensure their future.” The Forest Service this year is spending more than $100 million on reforestation work. Spending is expected to further increase in com- ing years, to as much as $260 million annually, under the sweeping federal infrastruc- ture package approved last year, agency offi cials said. Some timber industry supporters were critical of last year’s reforesting legis- lation as insuffi cient to turn the tide on the scale of the wildfi re problem. They want more aggressive logging to thin stands that have become overgrown from years of sup- pressing fi res. To prevent replanted areas from becoming simi- larly overgrown, practices are changing so reforested stands are less dense with trees and therefore less fi re prone, said Joe Fargione, science direc- tor for North America at the Nature Conservancy. But challenges to the For- est Service’s goal remain, from fi nding enough seeds to hiring enough workers to plant them, Fargione said. Many seedlings will die before reaching maturity due to drought and insects, both of which can be exacerbated by climate change. “You’ve got to be smart about where you plant,” Far- gione said. “There are some places that the climate has already changed enough that it makes the probability of successfully reestablishing trees pretty low.” Living trees are a major “sink” for carbon dioxide that’s driving climate change when it enters the atmo- sphere, Fargione said. That means replacing those that die is important to keep cli- mate change from getting even worse. Congress in 1980 cre- ated a reforestation trust that had previously capped fund- ing — which came from tar- iff s on timber products — at $30 million annually. That was enough money when the most signifi cant need for reforestation came from log- ging, but became insuffi cient as the number of large, high intensity fi res increased, offi - cials said. Insects, disease and tim- ber harvests also contribute to the amount of land that needs reforestation work, but the vast majority comes from fi res. In the past fi ve years alone, more than 5 million acres were severely burned. Scientists use tiny tags to learn how young lamprey travel through dams Little is known about life cycle ‘THIS TAGGING EFFORT HELPS US IDENTIFY POTENTIAL PROBLEM AREAS, AND IT HELPS US UNDERSTAND THE SCALE AND THE MAGNITUDE AND LOCATION, SO WE CAN IDENTIFY FIXES THAT ARE NEEDED.’ By COURTNET FLATT Northwest News Network Lamprey have been around for more than 450 million years before dino- saurs roamed the earth. The eel-like fi sh survived ice ages and heat waves. Now, they aren’t doing well, and scientists don’t know exactly why, but they do know lamprey have struggled getting around large concrete dams in the Pacifi c Northwest. The Pacifi c lamprey are culturally important to Northwest tribes. In addi- tion, young lamprey help fi l- ter river water as they feed on algae in the sediment. After adult lamprey die, their bodies provide key nutrients to river ecosystems. Scientists know very little about the lamprey life cycle, including how young Pacifi c lamprey pass through dams. “The more we can learn about lamprey as they’re passing through dams, that’s kind of the big black box right now,” said Bob Muel- ler, an earth scientist with Pacifi c Northwest National Laboratory. However, that lack of knowledge could soon change with the innovation of tiny batteries that will allow scientists to track the young gray, toothy fi sh as they migrate to the ocean. “This is the very fi rst acoustic telemetry study with juvenile Pacifi c lam- prey on the main stem of the Columbia River s ystem,” said Kate Deters, an earth scientist with the lab. With this study, scientists hope to learn more about the behavior and survival of these young lamprey as they pass through dams on the Snake River. “In the past, the tags just haven’t been small enough to tag in these very small fi sh,” she said. Gobs of information In addition, this transmit- ter provides gobs of infor- mation about where each fi sh passes through the dams, from the spillway to bypass systems to through the turbines. Moreover, Deters said, scientists might learn more about where lam- prey like to travel within the Aaron Jackson | lamprey project leader for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation Dave Herasimtschuk/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service An adult Pacifi c lamprey. river, like how close they swim to the bank. The tag that’s gathering this information is powered by a tiny battery, said Dan- iel Deng, a lab fellow. This microbattery took roughly three years to develop, building on years of earlier mircobattery work. The bat- tery for these tags lasts about 30 days when the transmit- ter sends information every fi ve seconds, Deng said. In that time, it will help gather invaluable information, he said. New designs scien- tists are working on should improve the battery life, Deng said. “Hopefully, we can pro- vide some good information for policymakers and other stakeholders, so they can use this information to have even better dam operations,” Deng said. Hydropower dams on the Columbia River s ystem have been fi ne-tuned for salmon, said Steve Juhnke, a fi sh biologist project manager with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. However, those fi sh passage have sometimes neglected other anadromous fi sh, such as lamprey, and resident fi sh, such as Amer- ican shad, he said. “It’s encouraging to get to the point where you can include those fi sh in your studies and consider them in the operations of the proj- ect,” Juhnke said. Moreover, he said, lam- prey are poor swimmers, which makes it a challenge for them to migrate down- stream, as well as for adult fi sh to swim up ladders. “There have been a lot of assumptions made about juvenile lamprey in the past, and now we’re able to either prove or disprove those assumptions,” Juhnke said. One of those assumptions includes the water depths WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 that lamprey migrate in the river, he said. Information from this study will help the Army Corps improve lamprey pas- sage if possible, he said. This pilot project cost around $1.1 million, he said. The Army Corps plans to fund this project for up to four more years, moving around to study diff erent dams, he said, each of which have unique passage challenges. A fi rst food It’s been a long road studying these fi sh in the natural environment. For Northwest tribes, years of studying lamprey have helped shine a light on these culturally important fi sh, often called eels. Lamprey are a fi rst food, said Aaron Jackson, the lam- prey project leader for the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. “Lampreys are, in my mind, the fi rst food,” Jackson said. “I’ve had them grilled. I’ve had them smoked over cherry wood. I even have a friend who has made lam- prey pate with them. That’s quite good.” Jackson called lam- prey a unique and acquired taste, with a high lipid con- tent and lots of oil, similar to mackerel. Indigenous people used to eat lamprey often for nourishment, he said. Now, the fi sh are far less abundant. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Res- ervation now harvests mostly at Willamette Falls instead of all throughout its ceded lands in north- eastern Oregon and south- eastern Washington and at Celilo Falls, before the con- struction of The Dalles Dam fl ooded the historic fi shing area and marketplace, Jack- son said. “Getting these lamprey back up into these areas that they once were will pro- vide those increased har- vest opportunities for tribes and that cultural and tradi- tional connection that has been missing for quite some time,” Jackson said. It will take a lot of work to attain sustainable and har- vestable populations of lam- prey. To start, tribes have translocated adult lamprey from the lower Columbia River hundreds of miles to waterways that historically supported lamprey, such as the Umatilla River. Those adults spawn, and their off spring need to make it past dams and to the ocean. That’s why it’s import- ant to learn more about how these young lamprey swim downstream, Jackson said. “This tagging eff ort helps us identify potential prob- lem areas, and it helps us understand the scale and the magnitude and location, so we can identify fi xes that are needed,” he said. Consult a PROFESSIONAL Q: What are dental sealants, who should get them and how long do they last? A: JEFFREY M. LEINASSAR DMD, FAGD L E I NA S S A R DENTAL EXCELLENCE 503/325-0310 1414 MARINE DRIVE, ASTORIA www.smileastoria.com Q: Does Medicare cover chiropractic care? ASTORIA Only Co-Op Daycare in Clatsop County Quality Care at Affordable Rates Daycare as low as $500/month Preschool as low as $160/month Multiple Child Discounts 3 yr old (potty trained) - 6 yr old Monday-Friday 8am-5pm LIghthouse Christian Church on Dellmoor Loop Rd. Warrenton Please call 503-738-5182 to Register Today https://www.lighthouseofhope.org/preschool-daycare A: Yes, it does! Medicare covers chiropractic services. 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