Forests & Wildlife - Research & Publications
Here's a catalog of Sightline's research--including books, reports, and articles--on forests, wildlife, and ecosystem management.
most recent | publication type
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06/12/2007
Fact sheet
2007 Wildlife Indicator - At a Glance
The latest addition to the Cascadia Scorecard--Sightline's wildlife index--tracks population counts of five key indicator species: gray wolves, mountain caribou, greater sage-grouse, orcas, and Chinook salmon. -
03/01/2006
Article by Sightline
Accounting 101 for Endangered Species
Dust off your sense of outrage, fellow taxpaying Americans. Endangered species are freeloading to the tune of $1.4 billion in state and federal spending, according to a new report from the US Fish and Wildlife Service. -
12/12/2005
Newsletter article
Sightline Profile: Peter and Pam Hayes
Longtime Sightline friends Peter and Pam Hayes, who manage 800 acres of sustainably managed forests in Oregon, are pioneering a strategy called community-connected forestry. -
10/07/2005
Fact sheet
Wildlife Indicator - Gray Wolves
The west was wolfless until the mid-1990s, when small populations were re-introduced. -
10/07/2005
Fact sheet
Wildlife Indicator - Chinook Salmon
No creature, beside humans, penetrates the Pacific Northwest as thoroughly as salmon. The wildlife index tracks Chinook salmon returning as adults to the Bonneville Dam, the lowest dam on the Columbia River. -
10/07/2005
Fact sheet
Wildlife Indicator - Orcas
Sightline's wildlife index tracks the southern resident orcas that inhabit the inland seas of Washington and British Columbia. -
10/07/2005
Fact sheet
Wildlife Indicator - Greater Sage-Grouse
The greater sage-grouse, a popular gamebird in eastern Oregon and Washington, is an excellent indicator of the health of the sagelands country in the inland Northwest, an ecosystem rich in native biological integrity. -
10/07/2005
Fact sheet
Wildlife Indicator - Caribou
Caribou are highly endangered in the lower 48 United States and British Columbia. The remaining population in the Northwest consists of the tiny Selkirk herd, which occupies a small area of northeast Washington, northern Idaho, and an adjacent portion of BC. -
04/01/2005
Newsletter article
Sea Otters Show Signs of Life
Sea otters affect many layers of the ecosystem they inhabit, and the success of their return to British Columbia and Washington signifies the beginning of a return to healthy and thriving natural systems. -
03/07/2005
Fact sheet
Forests Indicator - Highlights
Cascadia's success at caring for old-growth forests and putting a sustainable forestry system in place. -
03/07/2005
Fact sheet
Forests indicator - Q&A
Facts on Sightline's satellite study of five forested areas in the Northwest, and how they compare in clearcutting and sustainable forestry. -
07/22/2004
Article by Sightline
Fate of state forests rests in Olympia
Over the next year, a half-dozen people in Olympia will decide the fate of forests vast enough to fill Mount Rainier National Park nearly nine times over. -
06/07/2004
Newsletter article
What's Green and Good for the Economy? FSC Certification
A market-based solution called Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) would keep timber harvest revenues flowing, leave old growth standing, and protect workers. -
05/26/2004
Article by Sightline
Unhappy Trails
The Northwest's backcountry offers a grim preview of what's to come thanks to global warming. -
06/01/1999
Book
Green Collar Jobs
A look at the Northwest's changing economy by chronicling the stories of five communities: Ketchikan, Alaska; Bend, Oregon; Haida Gwaii, British Columbia; Hayfork, California; and Boonville, California.
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