British Columbia Executes Stupendous Cedar
SAN FRANCISCO, 15 December – In spite of a law safeguarding ancient trees, animals and native old-growth within the Salmon Nation Rainforest, the British Columbia Ministry of Forests approved an illegal logging operation that put to death a colossal Yellow Cedar. That Ancient One had an astonishing 8.8-metre (29.9ft) circumference, one of the largest and oldest trees in the province.
This near 2000-year-old shrine and the surrounding rainforest was home to breeding marbled murrelets, a threatened species. These beautiful seabirds, first cousins of puffins and auklets, nest only in crowns of old-growth within the Salmon Nation Rainforest, laying one egg on a large branch festoon with lichens and mosses.
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