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1987: Newspaper
Articles and Events
In 1987, the controversy over the northern
spotted owl grew more heated and widespread.
The Bureau of Land Management, which manages tens of thousands
of acres of old growth spotted owl habitat in Oregon, stated that their
land would not apply to the Forest Services Alternative F, and would
remain open to logging. Meanwhile,
environmentalists tried to block timber sales from old growth areas and
claimed that at current rates all of the old growth left in the Pacific
Northwest would quickly disappear. In
April of 1987, the new Forest Service Chief Dale Robertson decided that
the SEIS published in 1986 was too mechanical, focusing only
on numbers of acres, and they needed to use more common sense.
He came up with a plan to reduce the proposed 2,200 required acres
per owl pair, so impacts on the timber industry would be reduced. Biologists and environmentalists criticized
this idea, and they doubted the spotted owl would be able to survive on
reduced amounts of land. Struggling
to survive in the middle of the arguments was the northern spotted owl.
In July, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service was formally asked
to consider listing the spotted owl as a threatened or endangered species.
A decision was to be made within a year.
Biological studies of the spotted owl increased as the Fish and
Wildlife Service worked to determine if the animal should be listed or
not. For example, one study found that 8 out of 10 fledglings did not
survive their first year. It was
proposed that this dramatic mortality was due to logging and reductions
of suitable habitat. Another study
found that there was an increase in the spotted owls predators,
as well as an increase in their competition (from another, more aggressive
species of owl) for old growth land. Combined with increased logging, the spotted
owl was having a hard time surviving.
Many felt that time was of the essence. In
November 1987, the argument for protecting old growth for owls was jolted
slightly by the discovery of a pair of nesting spotted owls in second-growth
forest. A local logging company cut the trees in this area anyway, leaving
just 75 acres around the nest, because it was stated in their contract
that they had a right to do so. Below are some selected articles reflecting
the status of the spotted owl controversy in 1987.
Date:
2/20/87 Spotted Owl Could
Land on Endangered Species List
From: NEWS, OR Date:
4/30/87 Forest Service
Rethinks Own Proposal From:
Herald, WA Date:
8/23/87 Sanctuary in
the Deep Woods From:
This World magazine Date:
8/25/87 Audubon Society
Focuses on Owls From:
Seattle Times, WA Date:
10/20/87 Suit Seeks to
Save Spotted Owl Habitat From:
The Oregonian, OR Date:
11/3/87 Loggers Told
Spotted Owls Dont Count in this Case
Date;
11/12/87 Fighting for
Life From: The Oregonian, OR *Please
contact the Forest History Society collections
staff if you would like copies of these or other articles*
SourceNorthern Spotted Owl Newsclippings 1986 1989
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