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Harvesting and Thinning Guidance for Treatments in Wildland-Urban Interface Areas of TSA 29
This document provides guidance on harvesting and thinning treatments within Wildland-Urban Interface areas, specifically focusing on reducing wildfire risk in British Columbia. It details a multi-step planning process for Community Wildfire Protect...This document provides guidance on harvesting and thinning treatments within Wildland-Urban Interface areas, specifically focusing on reducing wildfire risk in British Columbia. It details a multi-step planning process for Community Wildfire Protection Plans, emphasizing the analysis of land features, existing values like public safety and wildlife habitat, and long-term visions for a fire-resilient forest dominated by Douglas-fir. The report also presents case studies illustrating various fuel reduction methods and their associated costs, alongside operational considerations and responses from professionals regarding logging systems, fuel management, and funding challenges. This document delves into fire behavior modeling to inform best practices for achieving target fuel loadings and canopy base heights, while also highlighting policy conflicts that hinder cost-efficient implementation of these crucial wildfire mitigation strategies. -
Carpenter Lake Bridge River Prescribed Fire Planning
This document outlines the Carpenter LakeBridge River Prescribed Fire Planning initiative from September 2000, developed for the B. C. Hydro Bridge Coastal Fish and Wildlife Restoration Program. The core purpose of the project is to enhance and expan...This document outlines the Carpenter LakeBridge River Prescribed Fire Planning initiative from September 2000, developed for the B. C. Hydro Bridge Coastal Fish and Wildlife Restoration Program. The core purpose of the project is to enhance and expand crucial winter range habitat for ungulates, specifically Mule Deer, California Bighorn Sheep, and Mountain Goats, within the Carpenter Lake drainage area through the strategic application of prescribed fire. It addresses how fire suppression has led to coniferous encroachment, diminishing the open grassland ecosystems essential for these animals, and details the objectives, techniques, and specific areas identified for burning to restore more suitable forage and diverse habitat. The document also highlights past fire history in the area, the specific benefits of prescribed fire for each ungulate species, and detailed planning considerations for future burns. -
Moving Towards Adaptation Strategies in Forest Management - A Starting Place for the West Kootenays
This document serves as a foundational guide for adapting forest management practices in the West Kootenay region of British Columbia in the face of climate change. Recognizing the confirmed reality of climate change and its projected impacts on the ...This document serves as a foundational guide for adapting forest management practices in the West Kootenay region of British Columbia in the face of climate change. Recognizing the confirmed reality of climate change and its projected impacts on the region, the report outlines a starting point for forest practitioners to consider and implement adaptation strategies. It structures these strategies across different scales - landscape, ecosystemstand, and operational - offering specific actions relevant to the unique vulnerabilities identified in the northern, mid, and southern subregions of the West Kootenays. Ultimately, the report emphasizes the need for a deliberate and informed decision-making process to select and implement effective adaptation measures, advocating for ongoing monitoring and collaboration among stakeholders. -
Strategic Plan for the Use of Prescribed Fire to Restore Ecosystems in the Okanagan Region
This case study outlines a detailed approach to employing planned burns for ecological benefits. The document details the ecological role of fire in the Okanagan, current fire management practices, and the proposed strategic plan. Key themes include ...This case study outlines a detailed approach to employing planned burns for ecological benefits. The document details the ecological role of fire in the Okanagan, current fire management practices, and the proposed strategic plan. Key themes include the restoration and maintenance of ecosystem health and biodiversity through mimicking natural fire regimes, while also addressing risk management and collaboration among stakeholders. The plan likely specifies objectives, strategies, and implementation considerations for using prescribed fire as a vital tool in landscape management. -
LMH Management Strategy for Mule Deer Winter Ranges in the Cariboo-Chilcotin Part 1a Management Plan for Shallow and Moderate Snowpack Zones
This LMH Document #60 outlines a management strategy for mule deer winter ranges in the Cariboo-Chilcotin region of British Columbia, specifically focusing on transition and deep snowpack zones. Developed through years of research and aligned with ex...This LMH Document #60 outlines a management strategy for mule deer winter ranges in the Cariboo-Chilcotin region of British Columbia, specifically focusing on transition and deep snowpack zones. Developed through years of research and aligned with existing land use plans, the document provides management objectives and strategies for forest harvesting to maintain and restore suitable habitat. Key areas addressed include access planning, stand age structure, tree species composition, opening sizes for harvests, and the spatial layout of openings. It also includes appendices detailing snowpack zones, biodiversity considerations, forest health management, and a history of related research and planning efforts, aiming to guide forest managers and monitor habitat preservation. -
The Role of First Nations Guardians in Wildfire Response and Management - A Proposed National Strategy
This document explores the critical and expanded role of First Nations Guardians in Canada's wildfire response and management efforts. The document argues that Indigenous-led conservation and stewardship, particularly through the growing Guardians mo...This document explores the critical and expanded role of First Nations Guardians in Canada's wildfire response and management efforts. The document argues that Indigenous-led conservation and stewardship, particularly through the growing Guardians movement, offers a powerful model for addressing both environmental challenges and reconciliation. The strategy addresses systemic challenges like climate change, the disproportionate impact of fires on Indigenous communities, and current barriers to First Nations participation in fire management, emphasizing the need to integrate Indigenous knowledge and science with Western practices. The doucment outlines a three-pronged approach for Guardians to contribute to emergency response, fire and forest management, and knowledge and science, emphasizing the need for sustained funding, training, and meaningful partnerships with Crown agencies to realize this vision. -
Aleza Lake Research Forest Silvicultural Practices and Management for the Stand and Forest
This document outlines the principles and specific strategies guiding forest management within the Aleza Lake Research Forest. It's structured into key sections covering silvicultural practices, goals, and standards, emphasizing a balanced approach t...This document outlines the principles and specific strategies guiding forest management within the Aleza Lake Research Forest. It's structured into key sections covering silvicultural practices, goals, and standards, emphasizing a balanced approach to timber production, ecological values, research, and education. The document details aspects like reforestation methods, species selection, rotation lengths, and management of competing vegetation, all while considering climate change adaptation and forest health. This document serves as a comprehensive guide for ensuring sustainable and diverse forest management on the ALRF landbase, aligning with both provincial regulations and the unique objectives of a research and demonstration forest. -
Regeneration, Development, and Density Management in Aspen Stands
This document delves into the critical aspects of aspen silviculture, addressing the increasing complexity of managing aspen forests due to greater utilization and evolving approaches to mixedwood management. The authors review the mechanisms of aspe...This document delves into the critical aspects of aspen silviculture, addressing the increasing complexity of managing aspen forests due to greater utilization and evolving approaches to mixedwood management. The authors review the mechanisms of aspen regeneration, both through root suckering and seeds, and offer preliminary guidelines for managing the density of aspen stands in their early development. The paper aims to synthesize existing knowledge and identify knowledge gaps to better inform management decisions aimed at achieving various forest composition objectives. -
Climate Change and Sustainable Forest Management in Canada - A Guidebook for Assessing Vulnerability and Mainstreaming Adaptation into Decision Making
This document serves as a comprehensive guidebook for assessing the vulnerability of Sustainable Forest Management to climate change and implementing adaptation strategies. Recognizing that climate change is a critical challenge requiring a fundamen...This document serves as a comprehensive guidebook for assessing the vulnerability of Sustainable Forest Management to climate change and implementing adaptation strategies. Recognizing that climate change is a critical challenge requiring a fundamental rethinking of forest management, the core purpose is to help forestry practitioners and policymakers determine if current SFM objectives can be met under future climates. The guidebook outlines a multi-chapter assessment process, including steps to define the SFM system of interest, evaluate current climate and forest conditions, develop future climate and forest impact scenarios, assess the system's adaptive capacity, and prioritize and mainstream adaptation options into existing policies and practices. -
Guidelines for Commercial Thinning
This document serves as a comprehensive manual for commercial thinning within the province of British Columbia, detailing how to manage intermediate harvests where the wood removed covers extraction costs. The text outlines a multi-level strategy tha...This document serves as a comprehensive manual for commercial thinning within the province of British Columbia, detailing how to manage intermediate harvests where the wood removed covers extraction costs. The text outlines a multi-level strategy that integrates strategic planning at the landscape level with specific stand selection criteria, such as windfirmness, tree stability, and forest health. Its primary purpose is to offer practitioners a framework for using thinning as a strategic management tool to increase wood flow flexibility, enhance timber value, and protect non-timber resource values like biodiversity and visual landscapes. Furthermore, the guidelines establish strict administrative and legal requirements under the Forest Practices Code, mandating detailed silviculture prescriptions and rigorous post-harvest assessments to monitor soil disturbance and residual tree damage. -
Commercial Thinning - a Practical Guide for Woodlot Licensees in the North-Central Interior of British Columbia
This practical guide provides a comprehensive framework for commercial thinning in the North-Central Interior of British Columbia, specifically tailored for woodlot licensees operating in the Sub-Boreal Spruce zone. The document outlines a dual-purpo...This practical guide provides a comprehensive framework for commercial thinning in the North-Central Interior of British Columbia, specifically tailored for woodlot licensees operating in the Sub-Boreal Spruce zone. The document outlines a dual-purpose strategy designed to improve timber quality and stand value while simultaneously providing an immediate supply of wood fibre to regional mills. By focusing on immature, even-aged stands, the document explains how to select candidates based on height, density, and basal area, using tools like the spacing factor method to ensure trees have enough room to grow without destabilizing the forest. The document further details the mechanized harvesting process, emphasizing the use of specialized small-scale equipment and specific cutting rules to minimize damage to the remaining high-quality crop trees. This guide serves as an essential roadmap for foresters to balance economic feasibility with long-term silvicultural health through planning and real-time monitoring. -
LMH Silviculture Prescriptions Data Collection Field Handbook - Interpretive Guide for Data Collection Site Stratification and Sensitivity Evaluation for Silviculture Prescriptions
This LMH Document #47 serves as a technical guide for forestry practitioners, detailing the systematic collection of site-specific field data required to prepare a legally compliant silviculture prescription. Its central purpose is ensuring professio...This LMH Document #47 serves as a technical guide for forestry practitioners, detailing the systematic collection of site-specific field data required to prepare a legally compliant silviculture prescription. Its central purpose is ensuring professional accountability and due diligence by providing standardized procedures for rigorous site stratification, detailed mapping, and the comprehensive recording of ecological information on forms. The guide emphasizes collecting critical data points, including vegetation, site conditions, and extensive soil hazard assessments for factors such as displacement, erosion, and compaction. The collected information is used to define uniform management areas called Standards Units, allowing practitioners to develop appropriate silvicultural systems and operational constraints that successfully integrate timber objectives with other resource concerns, such as riparian and wildlife values. -
LMH Silviculture Systems Handbook for British Columbia
This LMH Document #79 outlines the principles and best practices for silvicultural systems in British Columbia, emphasizing a shift toward complex, multi-value forest management in the 21st century. Its primary purpose is to serve as a central refere...This LMH Document #79 outlines the principles and best practices for silvicultural systems in British Columbia, emphasizing a shift toward complex, multi-value forest management in the 21st century. Its primary purpose is to serve as a central reference and conceptual framework for forest professionals to design and implement silvicultural plans that move a stand from its current state to a desired future condition through planned interventions, known as stand development pathways. A crucial and recurring theme is the growing role of First Nations, including their traditional knowledge, values, and stewardship goals, which are integrated alongside ecological, social, and economic objectives. The document provides detailed guidance on technical aspects, such as managing for biodiversity, mitigating risks like windthrow and pests, and utilizing adaptive management for continuous improvement in forestry practices. -
LMH Management Strategy for Mule Deer Winter Ranges in the Cariboo-Chilcotin Part 1b Management Plan for Transition and Deep Snowpack Zones
This LMH Document #59 outlines a management strategy for mule deer winter ranges specifically within the transition and deep snowpack zones of the Cariboo-Chilcotin region. It's structured in two main parts: the first details winter range management ...This LMH Document #59 outlines a management strategy for mule deer winter ranges specifically within the transition and deep snowpack zones of the Cariboo-Chilcotin region. It's structured in two main parts: the first details winter range management objectives, including long-term spatial goals, access considerations, and stand-level targets for forest structure and species composition, largely employing a group selection silviculture system. The second part provides guidance on planning forest harvests to align with these objectives, offering practical steps and a checklist for implementation, aiming to integrate timber harvesting with the maintenance and restoration of suitable mule deer habitat. -
FRDA Commercial Thinning in Coastal Forest Stands Infested with Laminated Root Rot Preliminary Guidelines
This FRDA Research Memo #219 provides preliminary guidelines for conducting modified commercial thinning operations in coastal British Columbia forest stands grappling with laminated root rot, a pervasive disease caused by the native fungus Phellinus...This FRDA Research Memo #219 provides preliminary guidelines for conducting modified commercial thinning operations in coastal British Columbia forest stands grappling with laminated root rot, a pervasive disease caused by the native fungus Phellinus weirii. The disease reduces forest productivity by causing mortality, slowing growth, and predisposing trees to windthrow, and traditional thinning practices have intensified its spread. The modified commercial thinning operations involve first identifying and mapping LRR infection centers, then harvesting all susceptible trees within a specific disease buffer zone surrounding these centers, which are known as bridge trees, to isolate the infection and contain its spread. This research aims to validate predictive forest models and refine management strategies for balancing commercial logging viability with disease mitigation in afflicted areas. -
Chief Forester's Guidance on Coarse Woody Debris Management
This document offers guidance for managing coarse woody debris on crown forest land, stressing its vital role in forest and ecosystem productivity, particularly in terms of soil function and habitat. The central objective of this document is to incr...This document offers guidance for managing coarse woody debris on crown forest land, stressing its vital role in forest and ecosystem productivity, particularly in terms of soil function and habitat. The central objective of this document is to increase awareness and improve CWD planning and management both before and during harvest, with a critical emphasis on retaining a good variety of piece sizes which provide long-term ecological benefits. Furthermore, the guidance encourages the recruitment of CWD over time through the retention of standing trees, and uses monitoring data from the Forest and Range Evaluation Program to set target increases for the median density of large CWD pieces across different ecological zones. -
Braiding Indigenous and Western Knowledge for Climate Adapted Forests - An Ecocultural State of Science Report
This document outlines the critical need to braid Indigenous Knowledge and Western Science to create climate-adapted forests in the United States. A primary theme is the historical impact of Euro-American colonization, fire exclusion, and settler c...This document outlines the critical need to braid Indigenous Knowledge and Western Science to create climate-adapted forests in the United States. A primary theme is the historical impact of Euro-American colonization, fire exclusion, and settler colonialism on North American forest ecosystems, leading to the loss of Indigenous stewardship and creating dense, fire-maladapted landscapes highly vulnerable to severe wildfires and climate change stressors. The text defines IK as an invaluable, multi-generational body of systemic knowledge and cultural practices emphasizing kinship with nature and reciprocity, contrasting it with the empirical and objective approach of WS. -
Guidelines for Maintaining Biodiversity During Juvenile Spacing
This guidance document establishes mandated procedures for incorporating biological diversity conservation into the practice of juvenile spacing within young managed forests. The document defines biodiversity broadly and outlines a crucial two-tiered...This guidance document establishes mandated procedures for incorporating biological diversity conservation into the practice of juvenile spacing within young managed forests. The document defines biodiversity broadly and outlines a crucial two-tiered management structure: the Landscape Level, which involves large-scale planning using habitat corridors like Forest Ecosystem Networks, and the Stand Level, which dictates the retention of local attributes such as snags, riparian zones, and varied tree species. To ensure compliance, the guidelines provide specific instructions for identifying habitat features, timing operations, and drafting detailed contract clauses, often outlining species-specific requirements for animals like bears and moose. This framework ensures that the economic goals of timber production are executed in a way that is compatible with ecological objectives to sustain the unique variety of life found in British Columbiaa?Ts forests. -
Technical Guidance for Standardized Silvicultural Prescriptions for Managing Old-Growth Forests
This guidance document establishes a Standard Silvicultural Prescription Process for the conservation and stewardship of old-growth forests on National Forest System lands. Its fundamental objective is to provide detailed direction for maintaining or...This guidance document establishes a Standard Silvicultural Prescription Process for the conservation and stewardship of old-growth forests on National Forest System lands. Its fundamental objective is to provide detailed direction for maintaining or restoring the ecological integrity and resilience of these valuable ecosystems against threats like wildfire, insects, and climate change, emphasizing that treatments should not be driven by economic reasons. The structured approach involves five key phases, starting with a rigorous stand examination and diagnosis to determine treatment needs, which prioritize less intensive methods such as prescribed fire and thinning. This guidance ensures that management activities are monitored and evaluated to enhance the durability, resilience, and resistance of existing old-growth forest conditions. -
Stand Density Management Diagrams for Lodgepole Pine White Spruce and Interior Douglas-fir
This document introduces specialized Stand Density Management Diagrams to assist forest managers in British Columbia with planning the optimal growth and yield of even-aged stands of lodgepole pine, white spruce, and interior Douglas-fir. These grap...This document introduces specialized Stand Density Management Diagrams to assist forest managers in British Columbia with planning the optimal growth and yield of even-aged stands of lodgepole pine, white spruce, and interior Douglas-fir. These graphical tools function by depicting the temporal relationships among forest metrics, including stand density, top height, and mean tree volume, derived from the TASS growth simulation model. Silviculturists can use the SDMDs to visualize various growth paths, determine the optimal timing and intensity of thinnings, and make preliminary yield estimations for different management objectives. The diagrams map out the Zone of Imminent Competition Mortality and the density range for maximizing Current Annual Increment, providing essential information for maximizing timber production while minimizing losses.