4 resources found

Tags: Other Canadian Provinces Territories

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  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    Post Fire Vegetation Regeneration During Abnormally Dry Years Following Severe Montane Fire - Southern Alberta, Canada

    This paper investigates the patterns of post-fire vegetation regeneration in two climatically distinct sites in Waterton Lakes National Park, Canada, following a severe montane fire and subsequent abnormally dry conditions. The study aimed to quantif...
    This paper investigates the patterns of post-fire vegetation regeneration in two climatically distinct sites in Waterton Lakes National Park, Canada, following a severe montane fire and subsequent abnormally dry conditions. The study aimed to quantify the recovery trajectories of herbaceous understory and conifer seedlings over five years, revealing that site environmental conditions were more influential than inter-annual drought in determining recovery. Notably, the moist site exhibited greater herbaceous biomass accumulation while the drier site demonstrated significantly higher lodgepole pine seedling recruitment, indicating a complex ecological resilience to drought in fire-prone montane ecosystems. This paper affirmed the utility of remotely piloted aircraft systems for spatially monitoring changes in vegetation height, cover, and biomass after a disturbance.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    Conifer Regeneration After Experimental Shelterwood and Seed Tree Treatments in Broeal Forests - Finding Silvicultural Alternatives

    This study aimed to identify viable silvicultural alternatives to conventional clearcutting for promoting successful forest renewal in black spruce stands across the eastern Canadian boreal zone. Researchers evaluated whether partial harvesting techn...
    This study aimed to identify viable silvicultural alternatives to conventional clearcutting for promoting successful forest renewal in black spruce stands across the eastern Canadian boreal zone. Researchers evaluated whether partial harvesting techniques, specifically variations of shelterwood and seed-tree cutting, could achieve adequate conifer density over a ten-year period. The results confirmed that these partial harvest methods, when implemented alongside mechanical site preparation such as spot scarification, successfully facilitated sufficient density of black spruce regeneration. The research supports the use of shelterwood and seed-tree systems combined with soil disturbance as effective management strategies for meeting sustainable forest productivity objectives.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    Sexual and Vegetative Recruitment of Trembling Aspen Following a High-Severity Boreal Wildfre

    This paper investigates how the post-fire regeneration of trembling aspen is affected by the unique conditions of a high-severity boreal wildfire, specifically the Chuckegg Creek Fire in Alberta, Canada. The study's primary finding is that the succes...
    This paper investigates how the post-fire regeneration of trembling aspen is affected by the unique conditions of a high-severity boreal wildfire, specifically the Chuckegg Creek Fire in Alberta, Canada. The study's primary finding is that the success of aspen recruitment, either through vegetative suckering or seedlings, is strongly determined by surface fire severity and the timing of the burn relative to spring green-up. High surface fire severity, especially after green-up, decreased suckering by damaging root systems but simultaneously promoted the establishment of seedlings, effectively filling the regeneration gap and highlighting an alternative path for the foresta?Ts ecological resilience against intense disturbances. The paper concludes that a landscape mosaic of fire severities is crucial for maintaining both the long-lived clonal persistence and the necessary genetic diversity provided by sexual reproduction.
  • Peer-Reviewed Literature

    A Note on the Ecology and Management of Old Growth Forests in the Montane Cordillera

    This paper provides an ecological and management overview of the old-growth forests in Canada's Montane Cordillera, a region spanning British Columbia and Alberta known for having the nation's most diverse range of old-growth coniferous forests due t...
    This paper provides an ecological and management overview of the old-growth forests in Canada's Montane Cordillera, a region spanning British Columbia and Alberta known for having the nation's most diverse range of old-growth coniferous forests due to its varied climates and natural disturbance regimes. The author emphasizes that a forest's history of climate and disturbance profoundly influences the abundance and structure of old-growth stands, noting that wetter climates support more abundant old forests and old-growth-dependent organisms, such as epiphytic lichens. The text critiques the challenges of defining old-growth, which is often arbitrary and dependent on an ecologist's viewpoint, and highlights the urgent need for a better ecological understanding to make informed land-use decisions for both the wet-belt rainforests and the drier forests, which are heavily impacted by human activities.
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