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California Agriculture 60(3):108-109.
Published July 01, 2006
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WHAT DO YOU THINK?
The editorial staff of California Agriculture welcomes your letters, comments and suggestions. Please write to us at calag@ucop.edu or 1111 Franklin St., 6th floor, Oakland, CA 94607. Include your full name and address. Letters may be edited for space and clarity.
Assessing the health of forests
Regarding the April-June 2006 issue (“Restoring clarity: The search for Tahoe solutions”): “Nutrients flow from runoff at burned forest site in Lake Tahoe Basin” (page 65) uses the standard “unhealthy forest” examples — either composed of crowded, small trees or clogged with dead matter. Both examples are seral stages, which, if left to their own devices, would become mature forest, the crowded forest through competition and the over-littered forest through decomposition and reincorporation into new growth. Due to fire potential, humans proscribe both types; both arise mainly after logging or human-caused fires. We have scant knowledge of prehuman forest dynamics, but there are “old growth” examples where fire is not a factor for hundreds of years at a time.
The next article (“Erosion control reduces fine particles in runoff to Lake Tahoe,” page 72), suggests that controlled burning has unacceptable erosion problems and mechanical clearing is expensive, terrain-limited and less suited to the individual property owner. Block isolation, fire prevention and selective harvest with attention to forest floor detail all address the “unhealthy” forest issue.
A modified mechanical mastication (“Mechanical mastication thins Lake Tahoe Forest with few adverse impacts,” page 77) of fuel-loaded forests is to put all dead and thinned matter on the ground, where it decomposes most quickly to mulch and retains some moisture so as to be less flammable.
Stephen Diliberto
Graustark Agricultural Institute Miama, Okla.
Stunned by Tahoe issue
I am stunned by the April-June 2006 issue of California Agriculture (“Restoring clarity: The search for Tahoe solutions”). Where is the agriculture? Lake Tahoe is a beautiful place, and there are certainly issues surrounding the mixed use of the basin, but what is the relationship of Lake Tahoe to production agriculture in California?
Last time I checked, there weren't many crops grown in the Tahoe Basin, yet 38 pages and the cover are donated to the topic. As a UC graduate, and one who has spent most of my life in production agriculture, I look to California Agriculture as a resource to help me increase production, lower costs, and be a better steward of a precious natural resource. Isn't there a more appropriate place to put the issues surrounding Lake Tahoe than a publication whose title suggests its emphasis is on agriculture?
Chuck Nichols
Nichols Farms, Hanford
Editor's response: California Agriculture's subtitle (at the bottom of the cover of each issue) is “Research in Agricultural, Natural and Human Resources.” Our published manuscripts reflect these three major branches of the UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources. In the 60 years that the journal has been publishing, California has seen vast growth and diversification, and ANR has grown and diversified in response to the needs of the state. Today the articles in the magazine include natural resources and human resources research. However, agricultural research is still a major, and highly important, component.
Why do you read California Agriculture?
Editor's note: In the January-March 2006 issue, California Agriculture announced a brief survey of why people read the magazine and what they would like to see covered in the future. To participate in the survey, go to http://californiaagriculture.ucop.edu , or write calag@ucop.edu . A sample of responses follows.
I use the articles as a teaching resource in classes. The articles represent a good balance of specific data offered in a readable format. I appreciate the breadth of issues, and special issues that present a holistic approach to problem-solving. The issues are not unique to California but often represent tides of change that other regions are facing or may face in the future. A proportion of our students are from the West Coast and California, so this is an excellent way to stay informed.
I would like to see you continue with the diversity of issues as presented during the last 10 years. As a faculty member in a liberal arts college with an agriculture department, I appreciate California Agriculture's width of coverage — nutrition, water issues and irrigation management, pollution, range management and pest management.
Chris Goedhart
Dordt College
Sioux Center, Iowa
As an environmental specialist for the state of Hawaii, it is beneficial to know the latest in California production and pest management research. We depend on California for most of our fresh food and are also concerned with invasive species.
I always enjoy the diversity of your articles but do find issues that crossover to Hawaii particularly useful: small-scale farming, agriculture and water-quality protection, biotechnology and invasive species.
Susan Polanco de Couet
U.S. EPA, Region 9 Pacific Islands
Honolulu, Hawaii
I have subscribed since college (a B.A. in geography from CSU Los Angeles in 1972). The main reason was to keep up with the most important industry in our state, food. I greatly enjoyed the current issue on Lake Tahoe (April-June 2006). The articles all were area-impact studies, which is what we are doing locally in Southern California, the city of Chino and the San Gabriel Mountains. The stream temperature articles were also great (July-September 2005, pages 153 to 175). I have shared information from the publication with ranchers that I know in Kern County. Please continue to keep things diverse.
Tom Leslie
Arcadia