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Protecting Our Cypress

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The Value of Our Cypress
In 1963, the cypress tree was named Louisiana’s state tree. Cypress forests provide tremendous environmental, cultural, recreational, and economic value to our state.
- Protect coastal communities by buffering against hurricanes and absorbing storm surges and flood waters
- Naturally filter pollutants and excess nutrients before they contaminate swimming and fishing areas
- Support our economy through tourism and recreation (i.e. swamp tours, boating, camping, fishing, photography)
- Provide critical habitat for wildlife, including threatened and endangered species such as the Louisiana black bear, the bald eagle, and the recently rediscovered ivory-billed woodpecker
- Sustain freshwater and coastal fisheries
- Minimize the impacts of global warming
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Dollars Make Sense: Cypress forests promote our economy by providing recreational opportunities like bird watching, hunting, and fishing. |
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The Current Threat
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Though Louisiana’s wetlands face serious threats from coastal land loss and development, widespread clear cutting of cypress forests is a very imminent danger.
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A mixed message: State and federal officials are asking our nation for billions of dollars to restore Louisiana’s coast. However, it’s not clear whether our cypress forests, which help to combat coastal erosion, are adequately protected from logging under current state and federal laws.
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Garden mulch is not just being created as a byproduct of cypress lumber; stands of cypress forest are being logged to produce it.
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Loggers are operating with little to no oversight. No state laws exist to protect Louisiana’s state tree; some that are more than 1,000 years old.
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Science Working Group
In 2004, the Governor commissioned a Science Working Group (SWG) to assess the state’s coastal forests and to identify what is necessary to sustain their long-term health and usefulness. The SWG’s final report (April 2005) can be viewed at www.coastalforestswg.lsu.edu.
The SWG report confirms what has been long suspected: In many areas, the regeneration of cypress forests after logging is simply not possible. Due to changes in elevation and water flow over the past century, many cypress forests are permanently flooded and can’t regenerate. |
The Impact
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Though many areas that were logged in the early 1900s have regenerated, local scientists believe that many of Louisiana’s coastal cypress forests would not grow back if they are now cut.
- Logging of cypress should only be allowed in areas that scientists and certified foresters find are sustainable and that can regenerate.
- State policies must be developed to discourage timber cutting in areas that are unlikely to regenerate.
- Incentives must be created for private landowners who own cypress forest. Options may include conservation easements, tax-deductible donations to a land trust, or the transfer of timber rights.
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Reality Check: Our thriving cypress forests are more valuable than clear-cut areas.
(Photo source: US ACOE – New Orleans District, 11/2003) |
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How You Can Help
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Call on local and state officials to take action to protect our threatened cypress forests. Find your local legislators at www.legis.state.la.us.
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Use alternatives to cypress mulch like pine bark, pine straw, or recycled sugar cane, which have been found to be just as effective as cypress mulch, or save money by using leaves from your own yard.
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Educate family and friends on the effects that using cypress mulch in their gardens and yards will have on Louisiana’s cypress forests, and ultimately our coast.
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Contact major mulch users in your area - city and state parks, schools, etc. - and ask them to use alternatives to cypress mulch.
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To download a printable version of our cypress brochure click here
For More Information
Atchafalaya Basinkeeper (225) 659-2499 www.leanweb.org
Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana (225) 344-6555 www.crcl.org
Delta Chapter of the Sierra Club (985) 871-6695 www.louisiana.sierraclub.org
Gulf Restoration Network (504) 525-1528 www.healthygulf.org
Louisiana Audubon Council (504) 861-8465 www.louisianaaudubon.org
Louisiana Cypress Purchase Legacy (504) 891-7116 www.lapurchasecypresslegacy.net
Louisiana Environmental Action Network (225) 928-1315 www.leanweb.org
Lower Mississippi Riverkeeper (225) 928-1315 www.leanweb.org
Mississippi River Basin Alliance (504) 588-9008 www.mrba.org
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