Spotted Owl Seen Declining in Northwest

Ithaca 37

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This mess is going to take a long time to straighten out. Maybe the solution is controlled burns for about 50 years.

WASHINGTON - Fourteen years after coming under federal protection, the northern spotted owl continues on the decline in the Pacific Northwest, a study shows.

The report said the owl, an icon of the Northwest timber wars, no longer faces the threat it once did from logging. It faces new ones, however, principally the wildfires that rage through overgrown forests and the barred owl, a relative of the spotted owl, which rapidly is taking over spotted owl habitat in the West.


The study, conducted by a private firm for the Fish and Wildlife Service, appears to strike a blow at timber industry efforts to loosen restrictions on federal forest logging in Washington, Oregon and northern California.


Overall, northern spotted owls declined annually by about 3.7 percent from 1985 to 2003, the report suggests.


The decline was especially steep in Washington state, where the number of birds went down by about 7.3 percent per year. Barred owls seem to have an especially strong effect on spotted owls in that state, the report said.


Owls declined by 2.8 percent per year in Oregon and 2.2 percent in northern California.


Environmentalists said the report showed that Bush administration efforts to increase logging of old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest contradicted scientific findings on the owl's habitat needs. The bird has been the focus of bitter debate in the region since federal officials sharply reduced logging in the early 1990s to protect the spotted owl and other threatened species.


"What this report says to me is the spotted owl is in crisis, especially so in Washington state," said Susan Ash, conservation director for the Audubon Society of Portland.


But a timber industry representative said the report shows that trying to protect owls by limiting logging does not eliminate risks to the species.


"What's encouraging is that all of the original reasons for listing the spotted owl (as threatened) have been found to be either invalid or not a problem anymore," said Ross Mickey, Western Oregon manager for the American Forest Resource Council, an industry group that sued the Fish and Wildlife Service to reconsider owl protections.


The report was submitted Friday to the wildlife agency, which will decide by Nov. 15 whether the owl should continue to be protected by the Endangered Species Act.


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http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040925/ap_on_sc/spotted_owl_review_2
 
Don't even get me started on spotted owls :mad:
The "studies" on the district where I worked were a fuggin JOKE...nuff said!
 
Seems to be a little hostility here about the spotted owls. :eek: Seriously, though, what should be done? Are they a barometer of forest health or not? Would it be better for all wildlife if the timber industry in the NW had been allowed to continue harvesting until all old growth was gone?
 
I seem to remember a story about the spotted owl living only in certain areas/trees, then they spotted some living in a KMart sign or something like that.

So, should we start eliminating the barred owl? Prosecute them for taking out a protected species? Seems to me that this goes along with teh Natural Selection process. If the barred owl can adapt, and teh spotted owl can't, guess what....
 
Sorry Ithaca if I was "a bit abrupt" but the spotted owl thing is one item that still galls me from my Forest Service days.

When I first got on witht the USFS (as an intern back in '81) we did spotted owl surveys, which at the time meant, we got overtime $$ as the owl were generally called to (located) at night.

It would usually be two guys, windows down, slowly driving through the woods calling. Conversations were generally "Did ya hear that?" answer "Hear what?" Response, "Oh well, mark it down anyway." Question, "Was it barred or spotted?" Answer "Whatever, who cares!"

Reason? No owls=No overtime!

Now I'm sure there were many more "exact" studies but we found owls all over the place, in all kinds of canopy struture and species diversity.
Plus this "barred owl threat" is nothing new- barred owls have been expanding there range since the early 1900's and even are know to interbreed with the spots...how ya gonna stop that?
Hell, I've even seen doctrine saying (mainly mid CA) how we have to "protect" the spots from the common raven now as it is a predator to the spots.

When the Audobon society first came out with the "spotted owls crisis" they stated there was only 1,500 breeding pairs in the entire US- of which only 700 or so lived in CA. Heck on Simpson timberland alone they have found and banded over 600 pairs and thats in "managed timberlands" not the mature monoculture Douglas fir stands traditionally assumed to be the bird’s exclusive habitat.

I'll get off my
soapbox.gif
but sometimes this "sky is falling" crap gets to me. I believe we do need to keep check on the pulse when it comes to wildlife but I think too many people want to unwarrantly take things to the next step!

Dang...I'm outta breath...
 

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