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Wildlands at Risk:
Table of Contents
Take a trip!
Print this report
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Alaska:
Arctic National Wildlife
    Refuge
Tongass NF
Teshekpuk Lake
Arizona:
Grand Canyon-
    Parashant NM
Kaibab National Forest
California:
Sierra Nevada
Giant Sequoia NM
Colorado:
Dinosaur NM
Georgia:
Chattahoochee NF
Idaho:
Owyhee Canyonlands
Michigan/ Wisconsin:
Chequamegon-Nicolet
    National Forest
Minnesota:
Superior NF
Montana/Wyoming:
Rocky Mountain Front/
    Powder River Basin
North Carolina:
Great Smoky Mnts.
North Dakota:
Theodore Roosevelt NP
Oregon:
Zane Grey roadless
    area
Oregon/California/ Washington:
Salmon
Texas:
Padre Island
Utah:
Fisher Towers
Vermont:
Lamb Brook Wilderness
West Virginia:
Moutaintop removal
    mining
Monongahela NF
Wyoming:
Yellowstone NP
Upper Green River

Introduction | Places | Threats | Wildlands Main

Place: Giant Sequoia National Monument (California)
Threat: Logging

giant sequioaCommonly growing to 250 feet high and 15 feet across, giant sequoia trees are the largest living trees on Earth and -- with lifespans of 3,000 years or more -– they are some of the longest surviving organisms on Earth.

Giant Sequoia National Monument in California shelters more than half the giant sequoias in existence, in several large groves, and also provides essential habitat for the California spotted owl, Pacific fisher, and myriad other plants and animals. Hikers, campers, horseback riders, anglers, hunters, and skiers visit the Monument and are inspired by these magnificent cathedral forests.

The fight to protect the giant sequoias of California’s Sierra Nevada range began in the early 1900s with Sierra Club founder John Muir. Unfortunately, when Sequoia National Park was founded, over half the groves were left out. And in the 1980s, the Forest Service began clearcutting in those groves -- supposely to help germination of Sequoia trees! Sierra Club stopped the clearcuts and pressed for permanent protection. Finally, in 2000, the Giant Sequoia National Monument was established by President Bill Clinton, and 327,800 acres were set aside to protect this national symbol.

The Monument proclamation reads: "These forests need restoration to counteract the effects of a century of fire suppression and logging." Unfortunately, in January 2004 the Forest Service released a final Monument Management Plan that runs contrary to the spirit and intent of the Monument proclamation. The agency affirmed its decision a year later.

Instead of restoring the forests, the Bush administration policy calls for the removal of large, healthy, fire-resistant trees up to thirty inches in diameter -- even within the sequoia groves! This is more logging than would have been allowed had the area not been proclaimed a Monument.

"The federal government created Giant Sequoia National Monument to protect these rare ancient giants for all Americans," read one editorial from the Los Angeles Times. ("From Giants to Hot Tubs," January 29, 2003) "The Bush administration seems to think they have a higher purpose as decks and hot tubs."

In contrast, Sequoia National Park, adjacent to the Monument, is restoring its giant sequoia ecosystem through the careful use of prescribed fire and a conservative use of small-tree thinning that is typically used a small distance from structures to protect them from the threat of fire. Over several decades the Park Service has made considerable progress in returning a natural fire cycle to the ecosystem and increasing sequoia regeneration while avoiding harmful logging.

Says Joe Fontaine, Vice Chair of the Sierra Club's Sequoia Task Force, "There's no reason why what's working in Sequoia National Park couldn't work in Sequoia National Monument. There is a clearly better way to manage the Monument than to log the big, fire-resistant trees."

Help protect Giant Sequoia National Monument by signing our petition to President Bush.

Sierra Club Contacts:
Bill Corcoran, California: (310) 490-3419
Barbara Boyle, California: (916) 557-1100
Joe Fontaine, California: (661) 821-2055
Carla Cloer, Chair, Sequoia Task Force: carla.cloer@kernkaweah.sierraclub.org

Find Out More

Photo courtesy Charles Webber © California Academy of Sciences; used with permission.

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