Beyond Spotted Owls and Logging: Forest and Ecosystem Management Today

Speaker: 
Jerry Franklin
 
27 Sep 2012
 
8:00 PM
 
Great Hall, Memorial Union

Jerry Franklin is one of the country's leading authorities on sustainable forest management. He is known for his participation on President Clinton's Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT), established during the spotted owl controversy in the American Northwest. Environmentalists and timber companies alike now embrace his once-unconventional strategy for logging. Franklin is a professor of ecosystem analysis at the University of Washington. He is currently part of a team planning the National Ecological Observatory Network, a continental-scale observatory designed to gather and provide ecological data on the impacts of climate change, land use change and invasive species on natural resources and biodiversity. The 2012 Paul L. Errington Lecture.


A native of Oregon, Jerry Franklin received his BS and MS in Forest Management from Oregon State University as well as a PhD in Botany and Soils from Washington State. His professional achievements include fourteen years as a Forest Service research forester in the Pacific Northwest, two years as director of the National Science Foundation Ecosystem Studies Program and sixteen years as the Forest Service's chief plant ecologist in the Pacific Northwest. He has received numerous honors, including The Wilderness Society's 1988 Olaus and Margaret Murie Award for meritorious government service, the 2005 Heintz Award for the Environment, and an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from Simon Fraser University, British Columbia. Franklin's books include [i]Salvage Logging and Its Ecological Consequences; The Olympic Rain Forest: An Ecological Web; Conserving Forest Biodiversity;[/i] and [i]Creating a Forest for the Twenty-First Century.[/i]