ARCHIVED MATERIAL, some links may not work



Tribute to Paul Zinke, a longtime support of California and NW Forest Soils Council and a legendary forest soil scientist.


Information for Winter meeting of the California Forest Soils council - pdf document

The NWFSC charter is available - view online - MSWord document -

Is my membership current?  (click here to check status)
  (click here for instructions to pay dues)

Washington State Soil Scientsts...here is a message on state certification of soil scientists from Toby Rogers, Wash. Society of Professional Soil Scientists past president.

This website is maintained by Rob Harrison. Please send emails to robh@u.washington.edu for corrections, additions, etc.


Winter, 2009 meeting of the Northwest Forest Soils Council.

Click here to download word file with meeting Agenda

Click for directions from: Seattle Corvallis

FOREST PRACTICES AND ECOSYSTEM PROCESSES AFFECTING SOIL CARBON STORAGE AND ORGANIC MATTER TURNOVER

Northwest Forest Soils Council – Winter Technical Meeting 2009

March 9, 2009  9:00 am (Pacific Time Zone)

Gifford Pinchot National Forest Headquarters – Goat Rocks Room
10600 N.E. 51st Circle, Vancouver, WA 98682 USA

Videoconference locations are listed at the bottom of the announcement. 

REGISTRATION IS REQUESTED (no charge)-Contact: scott.holub@weyerhaeuser.com

Schedule

8:00–9:00 am    Pre-Meeting Socializing

9:00–9:10    Meeting Overview and Introduction
        Dick Miller, USFS retired, NWFSC chair
        Scott Holub, Weyerhaeuser, NWFSC vice-chair – meeting moderator

9:10–9:35    Forest carbon – an introduction
        Mark E. Harmon, Richardson Chair and Professor in Forest Science,
        Department of Forest Science, Oregon State University

9:40–10:05    Biomass removals and soil C at British Columbia Long Term Soil Productivity (LTSP) study sites.
Shannon M. Berch and Kirsten Hannam, Research Scientists,
Research Branch, BC Ministry of Forests and Range.

10:10–10:20    BREAK

10:20–10:45    Carryover effects of nitrogen fertilization on above and below ground carbon storage on second rotation Douglas-fir plantations in the Pacific Northwest. 
        Paul Footen, Graduate Student
        University of Washington College of Forest Resources

10:50–11:15    Considering spatial-temporal trends in soil C; data from plantations after 20 years post harvest and along productivity gradients of old-growth forests. 
        J. Marty Kranabetter, Coast Region Soil Scientist
        British Columbia Ministry of Forests and Range

11:20–11:45    Fire effects on soil – the 2002 Biscuit Fire
        Bernard Bormann, Principal Forest Ecologist and Team Leader,
        USDA Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station, Corvallis, OR
        Peter S. Homann, Professor, Department of Environmental Sciences
        Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA

11:45–Noon    DISCUSSION / STUDENT POSTER SESSION INTRODUCTION

END of TECHNICAL SESSION

Noon–1:30    LUNCH – on your own (Brown Bags Welcome)

1:30–2:30    NWFSC Business Meeting
        Elect new vice-chair
        Other Business- TBD

2:30–4:00    Team Member Reports (2-5 minutes each)

Videoconference locations (North to South) as of 2/24/2009
NOTE: These are subject to change, so verify with site coordinator before you attend.
For updates check: http://soilslab.cfr.washington.edu/nwfsc/ OR see this link for a map:

Prince George, BC
Ministry of Forests and Range, NIFR
1011 4th Avenue, Dogwood Boardroom. Notes: Meet in Lobby
Site coordinator: Stephane Dube
(250) 565-4363
Stephane.Dube@gov.bc.ca

Kamloops, BC (tentative)
Southern Interior Forest Region Office
515 Columbia St
Site coordinator: Graeme Hope
(250) 828-4166
Graeme.Hope@gov.bc.ca

Vancouver, BC
University of British Columbia - TBD
Site coordinator: Cindy Prescott
(604) 822-4701
Cindy.Prescott@ubc.ca

Victoria, BC (very tentative)
Ministry of Forests offices - Room 601
1483 Douglas
Site coordinator: Maija Finvers
(250) 387-9474   
Maija.Finvers@gov.bc.ca

Newport, WA – 45 miles northeast of Spokane on US Hwy 2
Newport Ranger Station - USFS
315 North Warren Ave (intersection of State Hwy 20 and North Warren Avenue)
Directions: Driving into town from the south, you turn left (west) at SR 20 and go about 3 blocks.  The office is on the left (south).  
Site coordinator: Nancy Glines
(509) 447-7360
nglines@fs.fed.us


Olympia, WA
Olympia Forest Sciences Laboratory – USFS
3625 93rd Ave. SW
Site coordinator: Connie Harrington
(360) 753-7670
charrington@fs.fed.us

***Vancouver, WA – Main conference location***
Gifford Pinchot National Forest Headquarters – Goat Rocks Room
10600 N.E. 51st Circle
Site coordinator: Scott Holub
scott.holub@weyerhaeuser.com

Pendleton, OR
Umatilla National Forest Office
2517 SW Hailey Avenue
Site coordinator: Craig R. Busskohl
(541) 278-3817
cbusskohl@fs.fed.us

Boise, ID (1 hour later)
Boise National Forest Supervisor's Office - Sunset Mountain Room
1249 S. Vinnell Way, STE 200
Site Coordinator: Terry Hardy
(208) 373-4235
thardy@fs.fed.us

Gold Beach, OR 
Gold Beach Ranger Station, "Silviculture" Building
29279 Ellensburg Ave.,
Notes:  park on the street or in the parking lot behind the main buildings (not the lot in front of the office for short-term parking).  
Site coordinator: Robyn Darbyshire
(541) 247-3838
rdarbyshire@fs.fed.us

Arcata, CA
Humboldt State University
Gist Hall room 225
Site coordinator: Joe Seney
(707) 826 3550
jps47@humboldt.edu
 
About the Northwest Forest Soils Council

 
Mailing Address:
Northwest Forest Soil Council
c/o Western Forestry and Conservation Assoc.
4033 SW Canyon Road
Portland, OR 97221
http://soilslab.cfr.washington.edu/nwfsc/
Phone: 503-226-4562
Fax: 503-226-2515



Council Officers:
Dick Miller, Chair
Scott Holub, Chair Elect
Rob Harrison, Secretary / Treasurer
Meeting Organizing Committee:
Dick Miller (millersoils@aol.com)
Tom Terry (tom.terry@weyerhaeuser.com)
Scott Holub (scott.holub@weyerhaeuser.com)
and others.

 
The Northwest Forest Soils Council, a council of the Western Forestry and Conservation Association, is organized to facilitate exchange of forest soils information and ideas among interested professionals in the Northwest, and to encourage a more widespread understanding that soil is the basis for production of forest wealth—timber, forage, water, wildlife, and recreation. Among technically trained people and laymen alike, the Council fosters the following concepts:

1.    Soil is an integral part of the forest---no crop can be managed sustainably without considering the soil that supports it. Forest practices can enhance, impair, or have no consequence on the productive capacity of the soil.
2.    Surveys of our forest soil resource provide a useful basis for better understanding the interactions between forest practices and soils, and for extending knowledge gained from research.
3.    Forest soils research is vitally necessary, if we are to maintain production of substantial values from forests and rangelands. Research should be accelerated by studies of the soil itself and by including soils investigations in other pertinent research.
4.    Soil science and its application should be strongly emphasized in forestry school curricula. Students of forestry and allied subjects should be impressed early in their training to be concerned about soil productivity.
5.    Education of the public in soil conservation and enhancement is necessary to encourage sound management and sustained productivity of lands.

Membership: Any person attending Council meetings and interested in advancing and using soils knowledge shall, upon payment of dues ($10/year), be a member in good standing with full privileges. Membership includes representatives of public, private and educational organizations from the northwestern United States and Canada. Dues payments will be accepted at the meeting or remit a check (payable to NWFSC) to the mailing address above.


 
********************************************************************

The Winter, 2008 meeting was held by phone. Weather didn't allow us to travel to Bellingham

We will keep the same technical session schedule (8:45 to 1:45) as on the agenda except voice will be by telephone/conference and the presentation slides will run on a computer at your physical location.

Here's the procedure:

1. Today: Coordinate local conference rooms if needed - OSU, Weyerhaeuser Centralia, Olympia FS, UW, UBC all have multiple participants and/or speakers.  We might even pick up some participants, so please advertise locally as well.  Reply to this email with your room numbers, so we can have local satellite mini-conferences.  If weather is bad, you can call in from home on Tuesday.

2. Tuesday pre-meeting: One person from each location (or if you are on your own) download the talks from the NWFSC website onto a computer with Microsoft PowerPoint to be used for viewing.  The talks ARE NOT ALL ONLINE as of 1:00 pm today, but they should be first thing Tuesday morning if not later today.  Some presentations are big so allow lots of time to download them:
http://soilslab.cfr.washington.edu/nwfsc/

3. Tuesday 8:30: Dial the teleconference access number: 866-799-2363
Enter numeric passcode: 5264775#
(Please call in at 8:30, so we can resolve problems if needed.  My cell phone is: (541) 206 9964)

4. Tuesday 8:35: Open talks 0_, 1_, 2_, and 3_.

5. Tuesday 8:45: Display talk 0_  Tom Terry will explain his slides, announcing when to switch to the next slide.

6. Tuesday 9:00: Display talk 1_  Tom Hinckley will explain his slides, announcing when to switch to the next slide.

The rest of the talks will go the same: individuals or locations will control the display and progression of local copies of presentation slides and speakers' voices will come over phone lines.  Comments and questions will be done through phone lines.  We will take breaks/lunch as scheduled.  You may opt to have onsite coffee and pastries, but I haven't worked that part out virtually yet. :)

Find the latest Agenda at:
http://soilslab.cfr.washington.edu/nwfsc/NWFSC-08Winter/NWFSC-2008-Winter-Meeting.pdf

I'm looking forward to a great meeting, as we make the best of the weather situation.

Be safe on the roads.  Stay home if you need to.

Any questions let me know.

Scott
________________________________
Scott M. Holub, Ph.D.
Weyerhaeuser Company
Silviculture Research Scientist
Albany, OR

scott.holub@weyerhaeuser.com

Tel  (541) 924 5265
Fax  (541) 924 5371
Cell (541) 206 9964


*****************
Speakers and Topics with ppt downloads:
 
Talk 0 ppt: Tom Terry, Weyerhaeuser Company -  Meeting organizing committee member
 
Talk 1 ppt: 9:00–9:30  “Effects of moisture stress on Douglas-fir physiology and growth” Tom Hinckley, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
 
Talk 2 ppt: 9:30–10:00  “Climatic gradients and Douglas-fir growth: Water limits growth from stand to region”
Jeremy Littell, University of Washington, Seattle, WA; David L. Peterson USFS PWFSL; Michael Tjoelker, UW College of Forest Resources
 
Talk 3 ppt:
10:00–10:30  “Hydraulic redistribution of soil water within the soil profile—physical mechanisms
 and implications to the amount of water available for tree growth” Rick Meinzer, USDA, Forest Service, Corvallis, OR; J. Renée Brooks, Western Ecology Division US EPA, Corvallis, OR; Jeff Warren, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Talk 4 ppt: 10:45–11:15  “Landform and topographic effects on soil moisture delivery / supply”
Jeffrey McDonnell, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR
 
Talk 5 ppt: 11:15–11:45  “Assessing Douglas-fir water-use history using stable isotope (13C and 18O) 
 composition of tree rings—principles and potential”. J. Renée Brooks, Western Ecology Division US EPA, Corvallis, OR  
 
Talk 6 ppt: 11:45–12:15  “Water-use efficiency of Douglas-fir: Effects of seasonal and interannual climate variability, stand age and nitrogen fertilization. Rachhpal “Paul” S. Jassal, T. Andrew “Andy” Black, Baozhang Chen, Zoran Nesic, Praveena Krishnan; Biometeorology & Soil Physics Group, University of BC; David Spittlehouse, Research Climatologist, BC Ministry of Forests and Range
 
12:15–1:15  Lunch
 
Talk 7 ppt: 1:15–1:45  “Long-term climatic change and potential effects on Douglas-fir growth”. Dave Spittlehouse, Research Climatologist, BC Ministry of Forests and Range 
 
End of Technical Session 
 

download meeting Agenda

download abstracts - Hinkley A B - Littell - Meinzer - Brooks - Jassal - Spittlehouse -

2007 NWFSC Summer Meeting:
July 31-August 1, 2007
Diamond Lake Ranger District, Umpqua National Forest


Agenda from the meeting:



 



2007 NWFSC Winter Meeting:
January 23, 2007
Weyerhaeuser Tech Center
Federal Way, WA

Agenda from the meeting


9:00-9:10    House-keeping instructions (Bill Scott, WTC)
9:10-9:15          Welcome to WTC (Christine Dean, VP Timberlands Technology R & D)

START OF TECH SESSION (How various forestry organizations use soils information)

9:15-9:20     Background and purpose (Dick Miller, coordinator)
9:20-9:40    WA DNR:  Soils / Forest Practices program (Laura Vaugeois, geologist/GIS)
9:40-9:55     WA DNR: Soils/Northwest Region (Noel Wolff, Sedro Wolly),
9:55-10:00     Q and A                                      
10:00-10:20    BIA, Yakima Agency ( Steve Wangerman, Soil Scientist)  
10:20-10:45    B.C. Ministries of Forests (Marty Kranabetter, Linking soil fertility to management- the power of BEC (Biogeoclimatic Ecosystem Classification))
10:45-11:00    BREAK
11:00-11:20     USFS (Steve Howes )
11:20-11:35    Weyerhaeuser Co.:  Soil management decision-support tools and their application (Ron Heninger )
11:35-11:50    Weyerhaeuser Co.:Environmental forestry soil data applications (Ted Turner, Geologist)
12:00-1:15    LUNCH  and Graduate Student Poster Session
1:15-2:00    Discussion: NWFSC Charter, mission, and future options; Summer field meeting (Miller, chair –elect)
2:00-3:00    Business meeting to formalize decisions  ( Dick Miller, Chair-elect)

•    Secretary/Treasury Reports, Mailing lists and procedures (Rob Harrison)
•    Committee report-Soil disturbance and classification ( TBA)
•    Nominating Committee and volunteers (elect next Chair- elect)
•    Summer meeting location(options and choice)
•    New business (donation to Smithsonian Soils exhibit, expanded mailings, promotional letters)
•    Other
            
3:00-4:00    Member updates (who is doing what)
                       
CLOSE of  MEETING



The 2006 newsletter of the California Forest Soils Coucil is available here (pdf file)

2006 NWFSC Summer Meeting:
August 7-9, 2006, Omak/Okanogan/Methow Area, WA


From: Millersoils@aol.com [mailto:Millersoils@aol.com]
Subject: NWFSC, summer meeting

Here is the general schedule for our August 2006 meeting: Steve Howes and
Annie Greene  have led this effort.

AUG 7. (Mon.) Travel to Omak ( advise making motel reservations ASP: The
STAMPEDE  starts on Thursday !!)

 7- 9:30 PM at the USFS , Okanogan Valley Offfice: Brad Flatten(
Winter  logging), Toby Rogers (Landscape stratification for the recent soil
survey), Steve Campbell( how to use the new soil survey)

AUG 8.  Visit several field sites: local practices and problems,
classification of soil disturbance, definitions (standards) of detrimental
soil disturbance (Annie Greene, Steve Howes, Mike Curran, others )

AUG 9. Drive about 45  minutes to Methow Valley research site ( "Birds and
Burns". Learn of sampling procedures for vegetation, downwood, snags and
birds. Review prescribed burning and consequences to wildlife ( John
Lehmkuhl and others) and soils ( Darlene Zabowski and others). Lunch in
field: End session about 2 PM. Depart for home or the Stampede !

Here is a link to local places to stay.

http://www.omakchronicle.com/omakvic/stay.htm

Sincerely yours, Dick Miller
3625 93rd Avenue SW
Olympia, WA 98512-9193

360-753-7684
FAX: 360-753-7737

millersoils@aol.com
 
2006 NWFSC Winter Meeting:
February 3 , Vancouver, WA


The 2006 Winter Technical Meeting will be held at the USFS office in Vancouver, WA. The subject is "Forest Health and the Montreal Protocol" organized by Dick Miller and Jim Boyle. Click here to view the agenda and results of this workshop.
 
2005 NWFSC Winter Meeting:
January 28 , Vancouver, WA


The 2005 Winter Technical Meeting was held at the USFS office in Vancouver, WA. The subject was "predicting response to fertilization" organized by Rob Harrison. Click here to view the agenda and results of this workshop.
Click here to download the 2005 Newsletter of the California Forest Soils Council (MS Word format).

2004 Winter Meeting,
Western Washington University


The 2004 Winter Technical Meeting was held at the Western Washington University. The subject was field instrumentation organized by Connie Harrington.


2003 NWFSC Winter Meeting at
Weyerhaeuser Technology Center Jan 24, 2003


The 2003 Winter Technical Meeting was held at the Weyerhaeuser Technology Center (WTC) on January 24, 2003.  The theme for the technical session is Soil Disturbance Management: Assessment / Risk-rating Impacts / and Strategic Database.  Dick Miller organized and facilitated the session.


2002 NWFSC Summer Field Trip
The 2002 Summer Meeting was held July 17-19, 2002 near Florence, Oregon. Click here to download the agenda for the field trip (MS Word format).


2001 NWFSC Summer Meeting
The 2001 Summer Meeting was held July 8-11, 2001 from Fairbanks, Alaska. Click here to see images from the field trip.


Spring, 2001 Newsletter
Click here to read the Spring, 2001 Newsletter from Tom Terry. Click here download a MS Word copy of it.



2001 Winter Meeting

We held our annual winter meeting at the Bellingham Public Library on January 26th, 2001. A total of 38 people registered (click here for list) and a great program on soil organisms was presented. A copy of the program and agenda is available (click here). We now have 131 people on our email list (click here for names and emails). If you would like to join the list, please contact Rob Harrison (robh@u.washington.edu). Please contact Richard Zabel (richard@westernforestry.org) to join the NWFSC.

You can download audio (.mp3) versions of the presentations by clicking on the persons name or title.

Bob Edmonds moderated the session on soil organisms.
1) Dave Myrold, Soil Organisms: Is it who you are or what you do that matters?
2) Bob Edmonds and Grace Sparks: Forest clearcut edges and fungi.
3) Shannon Hagerman: Effects of different clearcut sizes on the diversity and persistence of ectomycorrhizae.
4) Andy Moldenke: Forest soils and invertebrates.        An outline of his talk is also available.
5) Jim Marra: Effects of forest management on soil invertebrates on the Olympic Peninsula
6) Bob Gitzen and Steve West: Small mammals and forest soils
7) Graeme Hope: Current research in BC on soil organisms: is it making any difference to forest management?
8) Poster session included several current research projects.

The Business meeting (click here for mp3 file) was run by Darlene Zabowski, past president.
Mike Curran was elected as new President, to succeed Tom Terry starting 2003.
Rob Harrison was elected secretary/email/web person

Individual Investigator reports followed..an mp3 file is available by clicking here.


For old stuff below, click below
FieldTrip1999
Presentations from 2000 Winter meeting
WinterMeeting2000
Newsletter2000.doc
Newsletter2001.doc
Newsletter2001.html