Because logging often damages the streams in which salmon spawn, the species could eventually become federally protected, an action that would further limit the industry in the Northwest.
Logging increases the economy if the logs are exported.
cause
water logging and salinity
What is answer
cause
Logging increases the economy if the logs are exported.
Small, independent sawmill owners, have relied since World War II on public lands to supply the old-growth logs that can be turned into specialty products. Logging bans affect them directly.
Logging affect the environment in many ways: it destroys wildlifes habitats and it destroys trees we need for the environment.
Jay W. Nicholas has written: 'A review of literature and unpublished information on cutthroat trout (Salmo clarki clarki) of the Willamette watershed' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Cutthroat trout, Salmo 'Straying of adult coho salmon to and from a private hatchery at Yaquina Bay, Oregon' -- subject(s): Coho salmon, Hatchery fishes, Migration 'Coastal chinook salmon studies, 1980-83' -- subject(s): Chinook salmon 'The Oregon plan' -- subject(s): Coho salmon, Conservation of natural resources, Fishery conservation, Juvenile literature, Salmon, Water conservation, Watershed management, Wildlife conservation 'Chinook salmon populations in Oregon coastal river basins' -- subject(s): Chinook salmon, Fish populations, Pacific salmon fisheries 'Straying by hatchery-reared coho salmon released in Yaquina Bay, Oregon' -- subject(s): Coho salmon, Hatchery fishes
it affect every thing around us
Nope
Some of the negatives of logging include the affect of logging on the environment. Logging can destroy entire ecosystems and even cause certain species of animals to become endangered.
cause
Loads of trees are cut down...
water, logging, and construction
Many forces threaten salmon populations, there are forces such as over fishing, fishing techniques (purse seine), dams that block the upstream travel of salmon, reservoirs and lakes behind dams, damage from logging in the form of disturbed soil, and mining damage.
Over the last two centuries, dams, overfishing, excessive logging, shoreline development, pollution, and industrial water withdrawals have degraded rivers, streams, and oceans critical to the salmon's survival. Dams and pollution are hazards for the Atlantic salmon on its run to the spawning beds.