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Comment 33 for Public Workshop: 2022 Scoping Plan Update – Natural and Working Lands Scenarios Technical Workshop (nwl-2021-scen-ws) - 1st Workshop.
First Name: Frank
Last Name: Landis
Email Address: franklandis03@yahoo.com
Affiliation: CNPSSD
Subject: Working and Natural Lands Alternative Scenarios
Comment:
Dear Members of the Board, As a PhD trained botanist,I strongly object to the merger of conifer forests and shrublands into a single category. There is no functional utility in uniting these groups, because they store biomass in different ways (above versus below ground) and they arere subject to vastly different fire regimes, to vastly different climate limits, and so forth. This absurd simplification is not just useless, it is actively harmful. Most importantly, much of the state's vegetation has already been mapped in detail using a hierarchical classification by CDFW and CNPS, so lumping them actually undoes work that has already been done. Worse, it already ignores the crosswalk done by CDFW and CNPS between vegetation types and fire ecology, information that is freely available online. It also leads CARB into problematic conflict with existing species management scenarios under the state and federal Endangered Species Acts. And it probably conflicts with 30x30. And it probably conflicts with fire models being independently developed by insurance industry experts, although others in the State of California are working to reconcile the insurance and CalFire models. This is absolutely wrong scientifically, and will lead to erroneous management practices over large parts of the state for carbon sequestration, climate resilience, and wildfire management. CARB should withdraw these fatally flawed scenarios, provide separate categories (plural)for shrublands, and consult with recognized outside experts on appropriate management strategies that recognize that climate change and the extinction crisis are two facets of the same problem. Scenarios must simultaneously deal with climate resilience, fire resilience, conservation, and restoration simultaneously. This is completely doable, especially with current science and technology. As noted above, some of this work has already been done, and ignoring it helps no one. Thank you for taking my comments. Sincerely, Frank Landis, PhD
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Date and Time Comment Was Submitted: 2021-12-29 10:14:31
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