
Through Keeping Maine’s Forests, those who care about the future of the Maine Woods can share information and resources, promote sustainable forest management and conservation, improve stewardship of forest lands, and speak with one voice to state and federal elected officials.

Our Story

We are a proactive partnership from diverse backgrounds who believe that a healthy forest economy and ecosystem go hand in hand. Our coalition envisions a future Maine Woods as a mix of privately-owned, sustainably managed working forests and private and public lands conserved to protect unique ecological values. This mix will help assure the vitality of the forest products industry and sustain a healthy and intact forest ecosystem, supports local communities, protects valuable habitats, and assure public access for recreation for generations to come.
Maine has the largest unfragmented temperate broadleaf and mixed forest of any state in the nation and is one of the best examples of this type of ecosystem in the entire world. Ninety-four percent of this resource has been privately owned and managed for centuries, with forest products contributing more to Maine’s economy than any other industry. Almost 8 million acres are certified as sustainably managed. Moreover, Maine’s forest landowners have maintained the state’s tradition of permitting public access to their lands for recreation. This tradition is a phenomenal asset that Keeping Maine’s Forests seeks to conserve for future generations.
Our membership represents large forest landowners, forest-dependent businesses, recreation interests, Maine tribes, education and advocacy groups, land conservation and wildlife interests, and government agencies.
Projects
Keeping Maine’s Forests has been instrumental in providing a forum for interest groups to learn about Maine’s impending spruce budworm outbreak, and to provide input to industry and state leaders about the concerns of the environmental and conservation communities.
In 2013, signs of an impending outbreak of spruce budworm in Maine’s northern forest became evident. For those who are old enough to have witnessed the outbreak in the 1970s, the news raised alarm.
The eastern spruce budworm is believed to be the most damaging forest insect in Maine and North America. Outbreaks of the insect that kills balsam fir and spruce trees occur every 30 to 60 years. Severe defoliation in southern Quebec as of 2016 covers an area the size of Maine.
During the last outbreak, the insect decimated up to 25 million cords of spruce and fir − 21 percent of all fir trees in the state, according to the Maine Forest Products Council. The infestation cost the state’s forest-based economy hundreds of millions of dollars and had lasting effects on forest management practices and regulation, and wildlife.
The Maine Spruce Budworm Task Force formed in 2013 to study the economic and ecological effects that another outbreak might have on the state and a strategy to minimize those effects. Leading the task force were Robert Wagner, director of Center for Research on Sustainable Forests and Cooperative Forestry Research Unit the University of Maine, and KMF members Patrick Strauch of the Maine Forest Products Council, and Doug Denico, director of the Maine Forest Service. Task force teams included about 65 experts who focused on wood supply and economic impacts, monitoring and protection, forest management, policy, regulation, and funding, wildlife habitat, communications and outreach, and research priorities.
A draft of the report was released for public review in November, 2014. That month, Keeping Maine’s Forests convened a forum for interest groups, regulators, and lay people to hear the Task Force’s finding and recommendations, and to provide feedback. The questions and comments provided to the Task Force by forum attendees helped to shape the final report.
KMF continues to follow the outbreak, learn how it will affect the forest products industry and environment of northern Maine, and help to disseminate information so that Maine can manage the damage from this indigenous insect.
Go to http://www.sprucebudwormmaine.org for the latest news and data.
