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Protecting the Northern Spotted Owl: What it Cost the Logging Industry. Flint Jackson. The Question. In 1996, legislation was enacted establishing protection areas for Northern Spotted Owls The logging industry lost large areas of previously harvestable timber.
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Protecting the Northern Spotted Owl: What it Cost the Logging Industry Flint Jackson
The Question • In 1996, legislation was enacted establishing protection areas for Northern Spotted Owls • The logging industry lost large areas of previously harvestable timber. • The question: what was the value of the timber lost? • Area was limited to Snohomish County for visibility
Data • Data was acquired from the following sources: • Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR) • Washington State Department of Transportation (DOT) • Washington State Department of Revenue (DoR) • Types of Data • Protected Habitat Areas • Stand Types • Documented Logging Areas • Logging Areas No Longer in Use
Selecting Specific Stands • Only stands within habitat areas were selected
Separating Stand Types • Selected stands were differentiated by predominant species type
Total Area Lost • Statistics used to determine total affected area for each type
Total Affected Area • 12,265 acres of Douglas Fir • 25 acres of Red Alder • 21,459 acres of Western Hemlock
Value • Current the DoR: • Douglas Fir: $535 / MBF • Red Alder: $304 / MBF • Western Hemlock: $336 / MBF • The DNR and DoR use an average yield of 45 MBF (thousand board feet) per acre
Total Value • Douglas Fir: $294,997,034 • Red Alder: $347,155 • Western Hemlock: $323,984,080 • Total Value Lost: $619,328,268
Conclusion • Snohomish County had a relatively small area lost to commercial logging and still lost over $600 million worth of lumber • Other counties with larger areas lost even more • This helps explain the large number of jobs lost and the damage done to logging reliant communities