Headwaters Alliance

Headwaters Alliance Headwaters Alliance: Stewardship through Community

01/07/2025

The following press release from the USFS Rocky Mountain Research Station may be of interest to many HWA FB followers. Some of the research on lynx mentioned in this press release occurred in Mineral County on the Rio Grande NF.

Protected areas provide habitat for threatened lynx, but wildfire poses risks
Release Date: 01/06/2025
FORT COLLINS, Colo., January 6, 2025 — Canada lynx are specialized hunters, able to travel in deep snow and spot prey in the darkness from 250 feet away. Keen hearing and vision make them excellent trackers, but what do we learn by turning the tables and tracking them? Scientists are using GPS data and advanced modeling to refine maps and identify important habitat characteristics, particularly in the forests of western Colorado, southern Wyoming, and northern New Mexico, the southernmost extent of its range.
New research and updated maps show that more than half of lynx habitat in the southern Rocky Mountains overlaps protected areas like wilderness and national parks. The maps also show that lynx habitat is sparse, patchy, and poorly connected, existing only in narrow bands due to Colorado’s complex mountainous terrain. These maps can identify corridors where habitat loss affects animal movement, which is important for healthy populations. Updated maps help managers focus conservation efforts and pinpoint places to promote new habitat, especially given the frequency of human development, fire, and forest insect outbreaks near the edges of lynx range.
Lynx in the western U.S. prefer high elevation spruce-fir forests with tree branches hanging close to the snow or ground surface, providing dense horizontal cover. This forest structure supports the cat’s favorite prey, snowshoe hares, which can make up 90 percent of their diet in winter. Lynx were reintroduced to the southern Rockies over two decades ago, after populations had fallen below a self-sustaining level. Several generations of females and kittens have successfully established here, allowing these populations to bounce back.
Researchers used GPS collars to track lynx within the study area, focused on the southern extent of its range. They also considered over 40 habitat or environmental characteristics, such as the amount of precipitation as snow versus rain, the month with the coldest temperature, road density, vegetation, and slope position. Combining GPS and habitat data and using state-of-the-art statistical tools and modeling methods, these scientists identified which characteristics best predicted where lynx were found and used this information to map “likely” lynx habitat where cats have a high probability of living, breeding, and successfully raising young.
Then they took this information one step further, comparing “likely” habitat with disturbances like insect outbreaks, wildfire, timber harvest, or human-footprint impacts such as urbanization or ski resorts. The scientists found that around one-third of likely habitat overlapped with disturbance, including forest insect outbreaks (31 percent), wildfire (5 percent), and forest management activities like tree harvest and prescribed burning (3 percent). Despite the greater overlap of lynx habitat with insect outbreaks, the scientists are more concerned by the impacts of severe wildfires.
“We know that lynx continue to occupy areas after insects kill the overstory trees during spruce-beetle outbreaks. Forests impacted by spruce beetles still have enough young conifer trees in the understory to support hares,” said Dr. John Squires, the study's principal investigator and a Rocky Mountain Research Station research wildlife biologist. “Also, some tree species like subalpine fir often survive spruce beetle attacks. That means that forest insects represent a more benign threat to lynx compared to broad-scale, high-severity wildfire.”
The researchers found that lynx tend to avoid fire-impacted areas until the understory has regrown–a process that takes upwards of 50 years in subalpine forests in the southern Rockies, where fires tend to burn less frequently than lower elevation forests and are often stand-replacing.
“Although fire disturbance from 1990-2022 overlapped only 5 percent of likely lynx habitat in this area, we believe that frequent, high-severity fire is the main risk to lynx in high-elevation forests moving forward,” continued Squires.
“We were surprised at how little lynx habitat overlapped areas of managed forest and human development,” said Dr. Lucretia Olson, study coauthor and a Rocky Mountain Research Station ecologist. “While forest management mainly causes temporary habitat changes, activities like urbanization and developing or expanding ski areas often lead to permanent losses. We hope our work will reach managers who make complex decisions about land uses.”
Squires stressed the value of partnerships for conducting this research: “Close collaboration across state and federal agencies in terms of data sharing, logistical support, and added expertise made this research possible.”
Authors of this research include John Squires and Lucretia Olson of the Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station, Jacob Ivan of Colorado Parks and Wildlife, Peter McDonald of the Forest Service Rocky Mountain Region, and Joseph Holbrook of the University of Wyoming. For more information about this research, please refer to the scientific publication or visit the webpage for the Canada Lynx of the Rockies Research Program.

Forests in Flux: Nature's natural and not so natural rhythm of change.  Part 5 - final section of Mike Blakeman's presen...
10/29/2024

Forests in Flux: Nature's natural and not so natural rhythm of change. Part 5 - final section of Mike Blakeman's presentation.

The spruce budworm and Douglas fir beetle are killing thousands of Douglas fir trees in our area. Why is it happening? What can and cannot be done about it?

Click on each slide to learn more.

I hope you enjoyed this experiment with putting a presentation on Facebook. Not everyone can attend public presentations and only a few people would take the time click on a link to view the entire presentation on a website. We (Headwaters Alliance) hoped to reach more people by breaking a presentation into parts and putting them up on FB over a two week time period.

Feel free to comment and/or ask questions, I (Mike) will be happy to respond.

Forests in Flux: Nature's natural and not so natural rhythm of change. Part 4The 14,000 acre run of the Papoose Fire up ...
10/26/2024

Forests in Flux: Nature's natural and not so natural rhythm of change. Part 4

The 14,000 acre run of the Papoose Fire up Trout Creek on July 3, 2013 was the largest area burned in one day of the entire West Fork Complex. I backpacked into the area in 2015 and 2022. Let's see how it looked.

Forests in Flux: Nature's natural and not so natural rhythm of change.  Part 3The Upper Rio Grande went quite a long tim...
10/23/2024

Forests in Flux: Nature's natural and not so natural rhythm of change. Part 3

The Upper Rio Grande went quite a long time without any large fires and then it seemed like the dam broke in 2000. Here is a brief look at the fires close to home in 2002 and 2013.

The HWA Board of Directors invite you, our friends and community in Creede, Mineral County and neighbors on the Rio Gran...
10/22/2024

The HWA Board of Directors invite you, our friends and community in Creede, Mineral County and neighbors on the Rio Grande to attend our Annual Meeting on November 1, 2024 from 10am -2:30pm at the Creede Community Center.

Come listen, learn and discuss some of the pressing issues of water in our community, including legislative updates, all things Willow Creek and a lively roundtable discussion regarding the mountain headwaters of the Rio Grande and forests in Mineral County.

This is a free, open, public meeting. We welcome curious and collaborative community members to listen, learn and discuss some of the key issues affecting our home - forest health and fire mitigation, water quality, flood mitigation, and more. Stay tuned for more details!

Free lunch for attendees included, please RSVP to attend at [email protected].

Forests in Flux: Nature's natural and not so natural rhythm of change. Part two: The spruce beetle epidemic. Many people...
10/20/2024

Forests in Flux: Nature's natural and not so natural rhythm of change. Part two: The spruce beetle epidemic.

Many people, including some foresters, have speculated that warmer winters played a big role in the spruce beetle epidemic that killed millions of trees on the Rio Grande National Forest. But, the beetles co-evolved with spruce forests and create substances in the autumn that act as antifreeze to help them overwinter. We experienced one of our coldest Januarys on record during the epidemic and it didn't slow the beetles down.

There is one example in Colorado when extreme cold stopped a spruce beetle outbreak in the Flattops in the early 1950s. Temperatures dropped to -50 F. That was an extreme and rare event.

What caused the spruce beetle epidemic of the 2000s and 2010s in our area? Click on each slide to read the story.

Several people said they wanted to see my presentation (Mike Blakeman) in July but couldn’t make it. This presentation, ...
10/17/2024

Several people said they wanted to see my presentation (Mike Blakeman) in July but couldn’t make it. This presentation, titled “Forests in Flux: Nature’s natural and not so natural rhythm of change,” was done as part of a summer speakers series hosted by the Headwaters Alliance. I’m going to put my presentation up in parts spread out over several days to give people the opportunity to comment and ask questions. It will start with a general overview and then get into specifics. I hope you find it informative and, in the end, hopeful.

What is it? One of the many shafts that the Miners used to drop ore down to the Commodore Tunnel level before moving it ...
10/09/2024

What is it?

One of the many shafts that the Miners used to drop ore down to the Commodore Tunnel level before moving it outside. This one was likely mined as a raise, meaning excavated from the bottom upwards and then became an ore and/or waste shoot. Amazing to imagine the skill, fortitude, strength and vision that went into digging out these tunnels!

Want to learn more about the proposed Flow Through Bulkhead and Tunnel that the Nelson Tunnel Commodore Waste Rock Superfund Site EPA Project team is proposing installing? Come on out tonight, Wednesday, October 9th, 4-6pm at the Creede Community Center.

Don't forget to come on out tomorrow night  to hear updates from the EPA Superfund Project Team working on designing the...
10/08/2024

Don't forget to come on out tomorrow night to hear updates from the EPA Superfund Project Team working on designing the Flow-Through Bulkhead for the Nelson Tunnel Commodore Waste Rock Superfund Site.

Wednesday, October 9th from 4- 6pm, Creede Community Center.

Photo: EPA Team showing off repairs to the interior of the Commodore Tunnel in 2019.

We are looking forward to seeing interested folks at the Creede Community Center on November 9th regarding updates on th...
10/04/2024

We are looking forward to seeing interested folks at the Creede Community Center on November 9th regarding updates on the design and timeline for installing a flow-through bulkhead at the Nelson Tunnel. Come meet the excellent EPA Superfund Site Team and learn about this important effort.

Yesterday we announced funding from CWCB in support of the North Creede Stream Stability and Flood Mitigation Project. W...
10/03/2024

Yesterday we announced funding from CWCB in support of the North Creede Stream Stability and Flood Mitigation Project. Whoot!!!

But who is CWCB, you ask?

The mission of the fabulous Colorado Water Conservation Board is to conserve, develop, protect and manage Colorado's water for present and future generations.

CWCB was created 85 years ago in 1937 and today it remains Colorado's most comprehensive water information resource. The agency works on a broad range of programs and provides technical and financial assistance to support the Colorado Water Plan. Governed by a 15-member Board, CWCB's responsibilities include protecting Colorado's streams and lakes, flood mitigation, watershed protection, stream restoration, drought planning, water supply planning, and water project financing. Learn more here: www.cwcb.colorado.gov

But... CWCB is more than an agency who cares about water and provides generous funding .. it is the beautiful, individual people who make the place sing. HWA thanks all those special folks for all the ways in which they each inspired, informed, lit the fire, raised the bar, gave clear instruction, offered patience or a listening ear as HWA worked with all the good partners to develop the design for North Creede.

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Creede, CO
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