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Abstract
from: Ribe, R. 1999. Regeneration harvests versus clearcuts:
public views of the acceptability and aesthetics of Northwest
Forest Plan harvests. Northwest Science 73 (Special Issue):
102-117.
The Northwest Forest Plan, "New Forestry," and the "regeneration
harvests" they prescribe offer some potential resolution to long-standing
adverse perceptions of clearcut logging. This study investigated prospects for
this potential resolution preliminary to more robust findings from a larger
social perceptions study in progress. Ratings of acceptability and scenic beauty
for depictions of timber harvests with aggregated and dispersed patterns of
about 15 percent green-tree retention were acquired from a diverse sample of
adults in western Oregon and Washington. Respondents rated actual photographs
and simulated scenes showing the two retention patterns as well as clearcuts
and uncut forests shown in the same scenes. Respondents rated the green-tree
retention scenes with and without information about their "New Forestry"
attributes and intentions. Comparisons of the average ratings suggest that 15
percent green-tree retention harvests can be perceived much the same as clearcuts.
Public education is needed to improve perceptions of the acceptability of retention
harvests. Aggregated green-tree retention patterns within harvests may help
to produce more favorable perceptions of scenic beauty.
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