| OREGON'S LIVING LANDSCAPE - Strategies and
Opportunities to Conserve Biodiversity by the
Oregon Biodiversity Project, published by
Defenders of Wildlife, 218 pp. $29.95 (A
companion CD ROM [PC only] containing data sets
used in the statewide biodiversity analysis, plus
visualization software is available for $10.00 by
calling 503/697-3222). STEWARDSHIP INCENTIVES
- Conservation Strategies for Oregon's Working
Landscape by Sara Vickerman, published by
Defenders of Wildlife, 138 pp., $10.00
Reviewed by Andy Kerr
Full of interesting maps and color pictures, Oregon's
Living Landscape gives a lively and
interesting survey of the state's biodiversity.
It classifies Oregon public lands using a 1-10
ranking scale, a 10 being the best. 8-10
comprises the "conservation network"
and includes most Wilderness Areas and The Nature
Conservancy Preserves. If private lands were
classified, they'd generally rank in the 1-4
range.
The book depicts numerous "conservation
opportunity areas" that have extremely
imperiled (but savable or restorable) ecosystems
that should be targeted for improved biodiversity
management.
The "author" of Oregon's Living
Landscape is the Oregon Biodiversity Project,
a partnership of many, but primarily Defenders of
Wildlife and The Nature Conservancy. The natural
information is from The Nature Conservancy, while
the policy recommendations emanate from the
Western Office of Defenders of Wildlife which
"emphasizes alternative approaches to
environmental decision-making by facilitating
partnerships among divergent interests seeking
constructive solutions to environmental
problems."
Besides Sara Vickerman of Defenders and a
representative of TNC, the OBP steering committee
also includes a representative from PacifiCorp (a
conglomerate with pockets deep and fingers
everywhere); a southern Oregon timber scion (more
worldly than his father, he feels somewhat
uncomfortable about clearcutting); and an eastern
Oregon cattle rancher (who is looking for the
fat-free hot fudge sundae equivalent to grazing
on the public lands).
Stewardship Incentives outlines
potential methods to improve private land
management.
Vickerman has plotted a course that studiously
avoids controversy and polarization. By eschewing
controversy and embracing cooperation, she hopes
to move management of Oregon's "working
landscape" higher up the biodiversity
protection scale. Though my professional
experience, genetic (and cultural) predisposition
and rational preference are all for political
combat, I truly hope that Vickerman is right. But
I fear she is not.
While she does call for increasing the
conservation network, Vickerman sounds
pessimistic about the chances of doing so. Oregon's
Living Landscape laments controversy and
polarization, though it does acknowledge that the
only ecoregions with significant percentages
(22%) in the conservation network are those
affected by the President's (westside) Northwest
Forest Plan, mandated after a decade of
unprecedented polarization, controversy and
strife. Those eastside forest and grassland
ecoregions that haven't (yet) had their mother of
all battles fare more poorly (5 and 3%
respectively). Most pathetic is the Willamette
Valley (0.7%), where most Oregonians live.
Regrettably, the book omits estuarine and oceanic
ecoregions.
Contrast the approach of incremental
improvement on primarily private lands with that
of The Wildlands Project. TWP asserts that to
have functioning ecosystems, both across the
landscape and over time, that we must re-wild 50%
North America during the next century.
The role of volunteerism in conservation will
always be limited until greed is repealed or
usury is again a sin. As long as the enlightened
landowner doesn't want the money, things may work
for nature. But if the heirs didn't inherit the
same values or develop cocaine addictions, watch
out. In any case, the pool of enlightened
landowners will always be small. Volunteerism
must always complement, not substitute for,
public debate, regulatory, legal and political
action.
Like it or not, social change comes through
social tension. Much of the increased
"cooperation" by private landowners is
motivated not be an enlightenment about
biodiversity, but through a fear of government
action that may affect economic exploitation.
Governor John Kitzhaber was only able to obtain
the support of Big Timber for his coho salmon
plan because of the threat of the federal
Endangered Species Act. Big Timber did not see
the light; it felt the heat.
Vickerman proposes new positive incentives
designed to reward good behavior, while only
vaguely suggesting that the many existing
negative incentives rewarding bad behavior be
"fine-tuned." Many government subsidies
are irritating to both Earth and taxpayer. Should
environmentalists propose good incentives to
counteract bad incentives, or should we first (or
at least concurrently) work to end of
ecologically perverse incentives?
Many of the management recommendations offered
in Stewardship Incentives would place
additional costs on the landowner without a
concurrent financial benefit from the market.
Vickerman proposes both financial incentives
(read tax subsidies) to offset the costs and also
suggests psychic benefits (landowner recognition,
good feelings about stewardship, etc.) to help
achieve biodiversity improvement.
Conservation doesn't pay in a capitalist
system. One cannot have their forest (or
grassland) and clearcut (or cow-bomb) it too.
In the case of public land cattle grazing and
crop agriculture, it doesn't take long for
existing ongoing subsidies to exceed the value of
the land or activity being subsidized. Is it not
better to acquire the land outright and upgrade
the area into the conservation network? Should
not the government spend funds as efficiently as
TNC?
In the case of timber, Vickerman apparently
forgets that we live in a capitalist economy and
therefore money grows faster than trees. Doubling
a timber rotation will yield more than twice the
wood, but time is money. The only landowners who
are adopting such strategies are otherwise bonded
to the land and/or believe they have enough money
already. One will never see a widely held
publicly traded corporation voluntarily adopt
sustainable forestry; fiduciary responsibilities
to stockholders require otherwise.
There is a relationship between the necessary
amount of conservation reserve lands and the
stewardship on the remaining landscape. The
Wildlands Project is pessimistic about private
stewardship and seeks a conservation network of
what would be 8s through 10s on one-half of the
landscape (primarily on public lands-[again]
to-be). Vickerman sees this as unattainable and
optimistically labors in the vineyard of
cooperation seeking to move those lower numbers
higher. TNC at least recognizes greed, and simply
buys land to remove it from market pressures.
As more scientific information about the
perilous status of our ecosystems becomes known,
it puts more pressure on environmentalists to
succeed. Yet, we presently operate in political,
social and economic systems that aren't ready to
accept either the vision of The Wildlands Project
or of Sara Vickerman. Let's hope they both change
the world.
Kerr, Andy. 1998. "Volunteerism Alone
Won't Save the Planet." Cascadia Times.
September. 17.
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