NEW MEXICO
Gila National Forest
Gila Hoop. A coil of wire
found hanging around a fence post was tied to a log with a shoelace in
this beautiful grove of ponderosas. The Gila National Forest recently announced
a plan to log 90 million board feet of timber on 65,000 acres over the
next eight years. This amounts to 16,000 logging trucks of trees, by far
the largest timber project ever proposed on a southwestern National Forest.
Logging on this scale is unprecedented in the Southwest and must be stopped.
The Forest Guardians have vowed to do just that. They urge you to write,
call and fax the Gila National Forest today. Tell them this project called
the Negrito Ecosystems Project is ill conceived and should be permanently
abandoned:
Able Camarena, Gila National
Forest Supervisor
3005 E. Camino del Bosque
Silver City, NM 88061
Phone: 505.388.8201
Fax: 505.388.8201
For more information on how you can help achieve Zero Cut in Southwestern
forests, contact the Forest Guardians.
Apache National Forest
Sunfoil Circle. A strip of foil tape
found along a road became the medium for this circle around a stump in
a small clearcut. The Southwest's forests are lush islands separated from
one another by a sea of deserts and grasslands. As on true islands, isolation
has resulted in great species diversity and increased susceptibility to
human caused extinction. 100 years of heavy logging in the Southwest's
National Forests has pushed the entire forest ecosystem to the edge of
collapse. Southwestern songbirds have suffered huge declines in the last
20 years, a sure sign of an ecosystem in a state of emergency. Many reptiles,
amphibians, birds and old growth dependent plants are also in danger.
The Southwest Center for Biological Diversity's Mexican spotted owl
and Northern goshawk Endangered Species Act petitions have provided Southwest
forests with strong protection allies. The Mexican spotted owl is all that
stands between the last old growth mixed conifer forests and the timber
companies. The Northern goshawk provides the same protection to our old
growth ponderosa pine. They have also spurred a series of conservation
plans. Forest loss in the Southwest has dropped by 60% since our petitions
were filed. Contact the Southwest Center for Biological Diversity to find
out how you can help the great "island forests" of the Southwest.
For more information on how you can help Southwestern forests, contact
the Southwest Center for Biological
Diversity.
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