Daily CSR
Daily CSR

Daily CSR
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How Forest Management and BMPs Safeguard Water Quality and Aquatic Habitats



07/23/2024


How Forest Management and BMPs Safeguard Water Quality and Aquatic Habitats
More than half of the nation's drinking water comes from forests, underscoring the crucial role that timberland owners play in safeguarding water quality. Best Management Practices (BMPs) for water quality aim to preserve and enhance water quality by reducing sediment through the natural filtering properties of vegetation and erosion control measures near water bodies. These BMPs involve practices such as maintaining streamside management zones (SMZs) during harvesting, properly designing and building logging roads, and using logging techniques and equipment that protect water quality.
 
SMZs are areas left undisturbed or lightly harvested along streams to capture runoff and sediment. These zones offer additional benefits, such as stabilizing stream banks and providing food for aquatic life. By retaining trees along streams, SMZs shade the water, reducing direct sunlight exposure and minimizing temperature increases. This cooling effect is particularly crucial in northern areas with cold-water fisheries. Furthermore, riparian zones serve as vital habitats for wildlife, and SMZs can enhance wildlife habitat and create travel corridors.
 
Alongside SMZs, the design and construction of logging roads, as well as the use of logging practices and equipment that safeguard water quality, are essential components of our BMP implementation program within our Environmental Management System. Our goals include preventing surface water from directly entering streams, keeping debris out of drainage zones, and reducing sediment. We achieve sediment reduction during harvesting through BMPs designed to redirect surface flow away from exposed soils, using methods such as building small earthen diversions or placing treetops, which help slow runoff and allow water to filter into the forest floor.
 
Road construction and maintenance can contribute to sedimentation that harms water quality and aquatic habitats. Our road design aims to minimize stream crossings and to cross streams at right angles. When crossings are necessary, we apply BMPs to reduce sedimentation. Permanent crossings use bridges or culverts, designed to prevent erosion at crossing approaches. Proper road drainage is managed with features like dips, bridges, and culverts to redirect water away from the road and promote soil filtration.
 
Numerous scientific studies have assessed the effectiveness of water quality BMPs during harvesting, road construction, and site preparation. The findings consistently demonstrate that these BMPs effectively protect water quality and support healthy aquatic habitats, benefiting fish, aquatic insects, mussels, and ensuring clean water for human use.
 
Thirty years ago, we established the Mica Creek Experimental Watershed, located southeast of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, encompassing 6,672 acres of Mica Creek, a St. Joe River tributary. This "living laboratory" was created to conduct a long-term study on the impact of contemporary water quality BMPs on stream conditions. Results thus far indicate that forest management practices compliant with the Idaho Forest Practices Act BMPs have minimal to no negative effects on streams or aquatic life.