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Lynx and Logging

The good news is that Canada Lynx are thriving in Maine. Hundreds of the leggy, snow-loving cats are breeding in the state’s vast north woods, perhaps a historic high.

The bad news is that the population is headed for a crash, and logging industry clearcut practices seem to be the reason.

Strangely, it’s not an excess of clearcutting that is the problem; this time, it’s a lack of clearcutting that is creating environmental worries.

Thus begins a well-written news story by Murray Carpenter entitled: “Lynx and Logging Share Interests.” The piece ran in The Boston Globe and can be viewed online.

The story highlights the rise-fall nature of nature. Thirty years ago, massive industrial clearcuts, following a spruce budworm epidemic, changed the forest landscape in Maine. Today, this land has grown back into perfect hare – and lynx – habitat.

What complicates matters for the lynx is that the timber industry in Maine is shifting away from extensive clearcutting. As biologists ponder the future of the lynx, a lack of future early successional habitat, coupled with a warming climate, suggest to some that the lynx population isn’t viable over the long run.

To raise the stakes, the lynx is a federally endangered species, which brings national interest groups to the table, further complicating the debate.

Discussion *

Oct 19, 2009

Visit my site for new information on insect outbreaks.  I would be interested in your comments as I am not quite sure that I am right in my evaluation of the cause of outbreaks.  My site is loneresearcher.blogspot.com.

Thank you

Peter M.
May 31, 2009

Silly Environmentalists, Hares are for Lynx!

Once again, the knee jerk, thoughtless “environmental” (keyword being “mental”) movement saves us from ourselves to the detriment of everything around it.

When are thoughtful, concerned conservationists going to tell these vapid do-gooders to go back to the city and stay there?

William Simpson
May 29, 2009

The Snowshoe hare is the food base for this cat. They become tame, desperate the first season of a cyclic crash. This is usually when they are photographed in such places as Alaska. I have seen tracks, of pumas and lynx, in ME. and NH. respectivly, it’s always a uplift in spirit to spot these tracks.


                        Thanks!

william fisher

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