News

Alaskan yellow cedar was key in the renovation of a West Islip house designed it to look like the Hamptons home featured in the 2003 film "Something's Gotta Give." ...
If listed, the yellow cedar would become Alaska's first threatened or endangered tree and join the Aleutian fern as the only Alaska plants listed. Part of a 12-month review for protection of ...
Cedar shingle or shake siding and roofing would be my preferred option. Is there a real difference between shingles ... Alaskan yellow or western red cedars are most commonly used on houses.
Reporting from Seattle — The Alaska yellow cedar edged one step closer to being listed as a threatened or endangered species after the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced that the tree may ...
Gaglioti, a University of Alaska Fairbanks ecologist, is here to learn more about Alaska yellow cedar. He and I are camped in a nearby ghost forest that La Perouse Glacier ran over in the late 1800s.
Yellow-cedar, a culturally and economically valuable tree in southeastern Alaska and adjacent parts of British Columbia, has been dying off across large expanses of these areas for the past 100 years.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — U.S. Forest Service researchers have confirmed what has long been suspected about a valuable tree in Alaska’s Panhandle: A warming climate is killing off the yellow cedar ...
ANCHORAGE, Alaska— The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced today that Alaska yellow cedar trees may warrant protection under the Endangered Species Act because of ongoing threats from climate ...
The U.S. Forest Service's Pacific Northwest Research Station today released a new report that outlines a climate adaptation strategy for yellow-cedar in Alaska.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska— The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service denied endangered species protection today to the Alaska yellow cedar, which is threatened by the climate crisis and expanded logging in the ...
Yellow-cedar, a culturally and economically valuable tree in southeastern Alaska and adjacent parts of British Columbia, has been dying off across large expanses of these areas for the past 100 years.
Yellow cedar is a commercially valuable tree species for the timber industry. It grows from California all the way to Southeast Alaska, but there are fewer living trees growing across the range ...