If you have an interest in the public lands within the Northern Coast Range Adaptive Management Area (AMA), then this Guide is written for you.
You can be a partner in the AMA management process, whether your interest is:
What is the purpose of the guide?
The purpose of this AMA Guide is, first, to help everyone understand what this Adaptive Management Area is all about.
Second, the Guide outlines how we will conduct business in the AMA--by outlining a process to follow in planning and designing activities.
Third, the Guide points the way to opportunities for you, as a partner or stakeholder, to take part:
Where did the AMA idea come
from?
On April 13, 1994, the Northwest Forest Plan (Plan) was signed by the
Secretaries of Agriculture and Interior. It resulted from the President's
Forest Conference of April 1993 and was designed to help settle the prolonged
and heated controversy about how we should manage federal forests in the
Pacific Northwest.
The Plan's strategy is based on protecting a wide range of animal and
plant species and their habitats--the building blocks of biological diversity.
The strategy provides a network of reserves on federal lands to protect
older forests (Late-Successional Reserves), and also provides reserves
along all streams, lakes, and wetlands (Riparian Reserves). The Plan establishes
certain standards and guides for land management practices within the two
kinds of reserves, and other, less-restrictive standards for the federal
land outside the reserves (Matrix). Recognizing that we have much to learn
about ecosystem management, the Plan also created ten Adaptive Management
Areas--one in each physiographic province--where new approaches to public
forest land management are to be developed and tested.
Adaptation is the process of responding positively to change. As defined in Bormann et al. (1996), the term adaptive management is used to describe an approach to managing complex systems that builds on common sense and learning from experience. Adaptive management--which has sometimes been described as "learning to manage and managing to learn"--consists of three basic steps:
The team that prepared the Northwest Forest Plan applied a prescriptive
approach to forest land management to meet legal requirements for protecting
threatened and endangered species. They also recognized, however, that
we have much to learn about how to manage forest lands for a variety of
values. How could some creativity and flexibility in management be provided
and some opportunities for exploring and experimenting be created and sustained?
The ten Adaptive Management Areas, or AMAs, were created to help answer
this question (Shannon et al. 1996).
The Plan prescribes a different management emphasis for each AMA. While
the agencies are directed to apply adaptive management to all federal lands
in the Pacific Northwest, the AMAs were conceived particularly as places
to encourage the development and testing of new technical and social approaches
to forest management. Thus, learning itself becomes one of the most important
objectives--and outcomes--of management. Table 1 displays the ten AMAs
and the primary management emphasis for each.
Table 1. Adaptive Management Areas
|
|
|
|
|
| Applegate | Oregon | 277,500 | Development and testing of forest management practices to provide a broad range of forest values, including late-successional forest and riparian habitat |
| Central Cascades | Oregon | 155,700 | Intensive research on ecosystem & landscape processes, integration of forest & stream management |
| Cispus | Washington | 143,900 | Integration of timber production with maintenance of late-successional forest, riparian zones, and recreational values |
| Finney | Washington | 98,400 | Restoration of late-successional forest & riparian habitat |
| Goosenest | California | 172,900 | Management to promote forest health, late-successional forest, riparian habitat, and timber production |
| Hayfork | California | 488,500 | Commercial timber production, late-successional forest, and riparian habitat |
| Little River | Oregon | 91,800 | Intensive timber production and restoration and maintenance of riparian habitat |
| Northern Coast Range | Oregon | 281,200 | Restoration and maintenance of late-successional forest, conservation of fisheries and biological diversity |
| Olympic | Washington | 150,400 | Integration of ecological and economic objectives, restore structural complexity to forests and streams |
| Snoqualmie Pass | Washington | 212,700 | Provision of late-successional forest on "checkerboard" lands to provide a north-south connective link |
Restoring and maintaining late-successional forest is a common theme for most of the AMAs--but what is a late-successional forest? "Succession", as used here, refers to the sequence of different kinds of plant communities that come to occupy an area after the previous vegetative cover has been removed in some way. An area may be cleared by fire, flood, landslide, windstorm, or by human activities such as timber harvest. "Early-successional" plant cover, the first species to reoccupy a vacant site, generally consists of vegetation such as grass, herbs, thistles, and small shrubs. In western Oregon, this stage is followed (or succeeded) by tree seedlings, which change the character of the vegetation cover as they age and grow. The later stages of this succession ("late-successional"), as used in the Northwest Forest Plan, include mature forest (about age 80 to 190) and old growth (very roughly age 200 and older). The actual age at which late-successional and old-growth forest structure and characteristics develop varies widely from one area to another. Characteristics of late-successional forest are discussed in chapter 3. In this Guide, the term "older forest" will often be used to refer to what the Plan calls "late-successional forest."
AMA management is intended to focus not only on ecological goals, but also on economic and social concerns--especially those of local communities. The two are closely related:
Managers have the tools, resource information, and work force
needed to get things done.
Scientists can help design activities to answer specific questions,
and know how to collect the right kinds of information so that the questions
are answered.
Northern Coast Range Adaptive Management Area
Our
AMA is in the Oregon Coast Range, from Tillamook south almost to Newport.
About 1.4 million acres are within the exterior boundary of the AMA. This
boundary was drawn along watershed lines to include all Federal AMA lands,
amounting to more than 281,000 cres, about 22 percent of the total area.
Some 148,000 acres are Siuslaw National Forest lands administered by the
USDA Forest Service, Hebo Ranger District. The remaining 133,000 acres
are administered by the USDI Bureau of Land Management, Salem District,
Tillamook and Marys Peak Resource Areas. Table 2 displays Federal land
by county, and Map 1 displays locations of Federal,
State, and Tribal lands in the AMA.
Table 2. Northern Coast AMA: Acres
of Federal Land by County
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Benton | 156 | 778 | 0 | 934 |
| Lincoln | 6,057 | 0 | 33,128 | 39,185 |
| Polk | 230 | 39,889 | 1,169 | 41,288 |
| Tillamook | 11,033 | 37,035 | 88,849 | 136,917 |
| Washington | 317 | 4,762 | 0 | 5,079 |
| Yamhill | 60 | 32,961 | 24,837 | 57,858 |
|
|
17,853 | 115,425 | 147,983 | 281,261 |
That leaves just over a million acres of other ownership in the AMA,
including state forest land, tribal forests, forest industry lands, state
and county parks, private woodlots, farms, and communities. Fig.
1 shows the approximate distribution of AMA lands by type of ownership.
Note that the Northwest Forest Plan gives Federal agencies no management
authority regarding nonfederal lands within the AMA boundary. Cooperative
management of adjacent ownerships, however, is encouraged. Map
2, Major Land Owners, illustrates the ownership of the eight largest
forest industry companies in this area, along with the public and tribal
lands.
The objectives for managing federal lands in the Northern Coast Range AMA are presented in the Northwest Forest Plan as follows:
Adaptive Management Area Plans
The Northwest Forest Plan requires each AMA to have a plan, and this Guide has been prepared to fulfill that requirement for the Northern Coast Range AMA. Why, then, are we calling it a Guide, rather than a plan? A plan usually contains decisions on allocation of lands or resources to specific uses. Existing plans include the Siuslaw Forest Plan, which was amended by the Northwest Forest Plan, and the Salem District BLM Resource Management Plan, which was tiered to the Northwest Forest Plan.
This Guide, on the other hand, is not intended to be a vehicle for documenting
in-place management decisions. Instead, it is to be a working document
(which means that, with your help, we'll keep revising and improving it)
that will outline how we expect to do business and to help everyone interested
in the AMA understand how their concerns can be reflected in management
decisions. The expected effects of individual projects will be analyzed--and
their results predicted--as projects are developed.