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Geos Institute helps communities build resilience in the face of climate change

March 08, 2011
The Mail Tribune
By Dominick A. DellaSala
and Randi Spivak

Recognizing the need for a 21st-century vision, the Obama administration recently announced a sweeping planning rule for the 193-million-acre national forest system. The rule will govern management of the national forests with the goal of maintaining and restoring forests and watersheds that Oregonians will increasingly depend on for climate change insurance.  Read more…

Scientists predict that lodgepole pine — one of the most common trees at higher elevations in the Cascades and Rockies — will be largely gone from the Northwest by 2080 because of the warming climate.

Published: Monday, February 28, 2011
By Jeff Barnard
The Associated Press

GRANTS PASS, Ore. — Scientists predict that lodgepole pine — one of the most common trees at higher elevations in the Cascades and Rockies — will be largely gone from the Northwest by 2080 because of the warming climate.  Read more…

The Oregonian
Published: Saturday, February 19, 2011, 1:34 PM
By Dominick DellaSala and Randi Spivak

Recognizing the need for a 21st-century vision, the Obama administration recently announced a sweeping planning rule for the 193 million acre national forest system. The rule will govern management of the national forests with the goal of maintaining and restoring forests and watersheds that Oregonians will increasingly depend on for climate change insurance.  Read more…

February 14, 2011
The Daily Courier
By Jeff Barnard AP Environmental Writer

More than 20 years of logging cutbacks on national forests across the Northwest have yet to show much benefit for the northern spotted owl, leading to what many believe will be a double-barreled effort that includes locking up more acreage and purging thousands of a newcomer to the threatened species’ survival. 

Published: Friday, February 11, 2011, 3:57 PM       
By Eric Mortenson, The Oregonian

The U.S. Forest Service believes proposed revisions to its forest planning rule will accelerate timber sales and provide rural jobs while protecting watersheds, wildlife and quiet spaces for recreation.  Read more…

E&E Publishing
Thursday, December 23, 2010
By Eryn Gable, special to E&E

Spotted owl experts say the Obama administration’s latest draft recovery plan for the embattled Pacific Northwest raptor contains substantial flaws, including provisions to extensively log owl habitat to reduce fire risks — an approach they say is not backed by science and could reduce the owl’s chances of recovery.  Read more…

Valley Morning Star
December 19, 2010 6:35 PM

GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP) _ The Obama administration’s plan for saving spotted owls isn’t much better than the one proposed by his predecessor, experts on the threatened bird said. Read more…

The World
Posted: Saturday, December 18, 2010 11:00 am
By Jeff Barnard, AP Environmental Writer

The Obama administration’s plan for saving spotted owls isn’t much better than the one proposed by his predecessor, experts on the threatened bird said.  Read more…

October 25, 2010
By Paul Fattig
Mail Tribune

ASHLAND — What’s in a name? Plenty, if you are affiliated with the National Center for Conservation Science & Policy based in Ashland.  Read more…

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