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Can Roadless Areas Help Stem the Extinction Crisis in the U.S.?

"A new study looked at a group of forest lands that hold big conservation potential but aren’t adequately protected."

"It’s a small world for relictual slender salamanders, who live only in California. Development has slashed their suitable habitat to just two small areas in the mountains of Kern County — so keeping those last vestiges wild is critical to the amphibians’ survival.

And there’s some hope for that, because half of the salamanders’ habitat is in what’s known as “inventoried roadless areas.”

The lands, designated under the 2001 Roadless Area Conservation Rule, are generally undeveloped areas that are 5,000 acres or larger and not already classified as protected wilderness. The roadless rule — which applies to 58 million acres of national forest lands in the United States — leaves these landscapes open to uses like hunting and camping, and even oil development, but limits most road construction and commercial logging. Some areas have been degraded by livestock grazing, which is permitted by the rule, but most are relatively intact wild lands that provide enormous conservation value.

But just how much?"

Tara Lohan reports for The Revelator January 5, 2022.

Source: The Revelator, 01/07/2022