A Preliminary Examination of Planted Regeneration Survival and Leave-tree Wind Damage in Wet Interior Cedar Hemlock Silvicultural Systems Trials

This document evaluates the early success of the Northern Wetbelt Silvicultural Systems Project, a long-term study comparing how different logging methods affect forest health in east-central British Columbia. Researchers analyzed initial survival rates of planted spruce and cedar alongside the frequency of wind damage to residual trees across various harvest intensities, ranging from clearcuts to partial-retention systems. Their preliminary findings indicate that seedling survival is exceptionally high across all sites, while the risk of trees snapping or uprooting increases moderately as more of the surrounding forest canopy is removed. By providing baseline climate data and specific monitoring recommendations, the document serves as a foundational assessment to guide sustainable forest management and ecological restoration in the interior cedar-hemlock subzones.

Data and Materials

Organization

Additional Info

Field Value
Author M. Jull, R. Sagar, S. Stevenson
Publication Year 2003
Descriptive Location Cariboo
Last Updated January 29, 2026, 01:51 (UTC)
Created January 29, 2026, 01:51 (UTC)