Visualizing Environmental Science

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Summary 345

Seed tree cutting Clear-cutting

forage; water resources and watershed protection; mining;
hunting, fishing, and other forms of recreation; and habitat for
fishes and wildlife.

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Rangelands 333


  1. Rangelands are grasslands that aren’t intensively managed
    and are used for grazing livestock. Rangelands are also mined
    for mineral and energy resources, used for recreation, and
    preserved for biological habitat and for soil and water resources.

  2. Overgrazing is the destruction of vegetation caused by too
    many grazing animals consuming the plants in a particular
    area, leaving them unable to recover. Overgrazing accelerates
    land degradation, which decreases the future ability of the
    land to support crops or livestock. Desertification is the
    degradation of once-fertile rangeland or tropical dry forest
    into nonproductive desert.

  3. A conservation easement is a legal agreement that
    protects privately owned forest or other property from
    development for a specified number of years. Conservation
    groups often pay for conservation easements to preserve
    open rangeland.

  4. The BLM manages more than three-fourths of U.S. public
    rangelands, excluding Alaska; the USFS manages the
    remainder. Current issues on public rangelands include
    conflicts between environmental groups and ranchers over
    the number of livestock allowed to graze and the potential
    to manage the areas for uses such as biological habitat,
    recreation, and scenic value. Conflicts also arise over whether
    grazing fees paid by livestock operators on public lands
    should be high enough to cover all costs of maintaining herds,
    removing taxpayer burden.


Summary


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Land Use in the United States 322


  1. More than one-half of U.S. land is privately owned.
    Approximately one-third—including many types of ecosystems
    and land uses—is owned by the federal government. Nine
    percent belongs to state and local governments, and more
    than 2 percent to Native American tribes.


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Forests 324


  1. Sustainable forestry is the use and management of forest
    ecosystems in an environmentally balanced and enduring
    way. Sustainable forestry maintains a mix of forest trees, by
    age and species, rather than a monoculture, in which only
    one type of plant is cultivated over a large area. Adopting
    sustainable forestry principles requires setting aside
    sanctuaries and habitat corridors, protected zones that
    connect isolated unlogged or undeveloped areas.

  2. Deforestation is the temporary or permanent clearing of
    large expanses of forest for agriculture or other uses. Clear-
    cutting is a logging practice in which all the trees in a stand
    of forest are cut, leaving just the stumps; clear-cutting over
    a wide area is ecologically unsound. The major causes of
    tropical deforestation are subsistence farming, commercial
    logging, and cattle ranching, all accelerated by growing
    human populations. Increased needs for fuelwood drive
    deforestation of tropical dry forests.

  3. Most U.S. national forests are managed by the U.S. Forest
    Service (USFS); the rest are overseen by the Bureau of Land
    Management (BLM). National forests face conflicts associated
    with supporting multiple uses: timber harvest; livestock


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