Redwoods Rising: Save the Redwoods and Both the National and California State Parks Unite to Create a Connected Ecosystem

Press release from California State Parks:

Save the Redwoods League (League), the National Park Service (NPS) and California State Parks (State Parks) today announced a new commitment to heal previously-harvested redwood forests through a collaboration known as Redwoods Rising. One of the goals in the coming decades is to bring back stands of towering coast redwoods (Sequoia sempervirens) on 40,000 acres of public lands in Redwood National and State Parks (RNSP). Redwoods Rising creates an unprecedented level of collaboration between these three organizations to restore the redwood forests and ensure the parks’ entire 120,000 acres exist as a connected forest ecosystem and a thriving landscape that supports and protects the natural and cultural treasures found there.

“If our greatest responsibility is to leave the world better than we found it, then healing the redwood forest represents an opportunity of a lifetime. We can actually restore and grow the old-growth forests of the future,” said Sam Hodder, president and CEO of Save the Redwoods League. “We have the tools and the will, and thanks to our generous donors and our national and state park partners, we are taking a major step forward toward leaving California better than we found it.”

Located 325 miles north of San Francisco, Redwood National and State Parks are a UNESCO World Heritage site comprised of Redwood National Park, and Prairie Creek Redwoods, Del Norte Coast Redwoods, and Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Parks. The parks are home to 45 percent of the world’s remaining protected old-growth redwoods and half of the world’s tallest trees. However, surrounding the primeval redwood stands are large swaths of younger forest that were once heavily harvested. Old logging roads spread invasive species and erode sediment into nearby streams, threatening coho salmon and steelhead trout.

Benefits of Redwoods Rising
● Provides clean air and water
● Fights climate change
● Creates and restores wildlife habitat
● Begins to bring back the ancient redwoods for future generations to enjoy
● Leverages organizational strengths and expertise while increasing efficiency
● Provides a new opportunity for the public to support these forests directly

Coast redwood forests store more carbon per acre than any other forest on the planet — by at least three times. One of the exciting and environmentally important aspects of accelerating the growth of massive redwoods is that these trees are climate change fighters. So, as we restore the redwood forests, we increase their ability to absorb more carbon. Also, because the trees are so resistant to rot, they hold onto their carbon for a very long time even after they die. This is an effective, natural form of carbon sequestration.

“We are thrilled to collaborate with Save the Redwoods League and California State Parks,” said Steve Mietz, superintendent of Redwood National Park. “Redwoods Rising aligns the public and private sectors to take the next big steps towards restoring these cherished public landscapes. It is a great investment in our future.”

By 2022, the Redwoods Rising collaborative will conduct restoration forestry activities across 10,000 acres of the forested watersheds of Mill Creek and Prairie Creek within RNSP. These forests were clearcut prior to the parks’ establishment, and actively restoring them will reconnect precious remaining old-growth areas, improving habitat quality and resiliency.
“Now more than ever, we recognize that to protect our treasured redwoods, we must invest in the entire landscape,” said Lisa Mangat, director of California State Parks. “Our iconic redwoods provide for us in myriad ways — clean air and water, steelhead and salmon, and plentiful wildlife — just as they inspire us. With a bold initiative now, we can protect these ancient forests from the most extreme effects of climate change, and be confident that future Californians can enjoy their majesty.”

The League has already raised over $2.26 million towards the $5 million goal needed to fund initial projects, including support for the Forest Fellows program, which mentors the next generation of conservation foresters, and a $1 million grant from the S. D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation. Going forward, Redwoods Rising collaborators will work together to cultivate new private philanthropic and public support for the project, with the League as lead and fiscal administrator.

“Our first priority must be our best places, the places where we have the most extensive stands of old trees,” says Emily Burns, science director for Save the Redwoods League. “Redwood National and State Parks are our greatest remaining reservoirs of redwood forest biodiversity. They contain the precious and irreplaceable components of the full, complete and healthy redwood ecosystem. It is our job to spread the ecological wealth of these ancient stands into surrounding lands.”

Please visit RedwoodsRising.org for additional information and opportunities to support this exciting new initiative.

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Rick
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Rick
5 years ago

Yes!

Helllbilly
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Helllbilly
5 years ago

Awesome

Tavistock
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Tavistock
5 years ago

We have all the money for war, but I just want to see the forest for the trees. …not the fees.

Bozo
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Bozo
5 years ago

Colossal waste of money. I mean massive.

Just leave the land alone and the Redwood forests will come back.
Saw that before ‘Maxim’… on ‘PALCO’ forest lands. After 70 years without logging
and they were well on the way to becoming ‘old growth’ forests.
Want to witness it… go the Arcata forest lands. Old stumps are being grown over
and the trees getting bigger.

Come back in 50 years (or so) and you won’t recognize that place.
Wait 200 years and it will be ‘Old Growth’ forest.
That is something that money won’t speed up. Takes time.

>”League as lead and fiscal administrator.”

Hmmm… sounds like ‘Redwoods Rising’ is being set up to receive lots of funds.
That is money that could be spent on other ‘stuff’ that actually needs doing.

(Provided there is no climate change, or asteroid impact, nuclear war, or…)

HandyGal
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HandyGal
5 years ago
Reply to  Bozo

Though the trees may age and grow taller, they cannot recreate the ecosystem that comes with old growth status. The choices are; either let it dissapear into the future as surrounding ecosystems further alter the old growth ecosystems, or repair it and help it stand strong and sustain the many creatures that will thrive on the protected forest.

“Redwood National and State Parks are our greatest remaining reservoirs of redwood forest biodiversity. They contain the precious and irreplaceable components of the full, complete and healthy redwood ecosystem. It is our job to spread the ecological wealth of these ancient stands into surrounding lands.”

thebigdeal
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thebigdeal
5 years ago
Reply to  HandyGal

No It is not our job the spread the ecological wealth (whatever that is). It sounds like more private land coming off the tax rolls and added to the park system to me.

thebigdeal
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thebigdeal
5 years ago
Reply to  Bozo

you are totally correct this is nothing but crazy environmental weird shit to make tree huggers feel good. Total waste of $. These so called donors would of been better off buying beach front property on the moon. The forest heel themselfs. How much more protection does a state park need?

HandyGal
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HandyGal
5 years ago
Reply to  thebigdeal

“Ecological wealth, (whatever that is).”
If you dont know what it is? How do you know that it isnt worth protecting?
And what do you mean about the tax rolls thing?
I thought the parks were joining with a conservation team or something like that to remove boundaries that could otherwise slow the healing process. Is there private land involved in this?

fuckwalterwhite.com
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fuckwalterwhite.com
5 years ago

But tourists will come here for the weed(that grows anywhere)