Forest Health and Climate Change - A British Columbia Perspective

This paper examines the complex relationship between forest health and climate change from a British Columbia perspective, building on the impact of past events like the mountain pine beetle and Dothistroma needle blight epidemics. The authors present estimations of how various forest pests are expected to behave as climate continues to change, emphasizing that rapid environmental shifts are favoring fast-reproducing pests over long-lived trees. The research offers management recommendations aimed at increasing forest resilience, such as implementing assisted migration and genetic diversity, while stressing that the future of forest management requires flexibility and adaptation in the face of unprecedented uncertainty. The purpose of this paper is to equip managers with projections for the near future and emphasize the urgency of integrating proactive forest health measures into all aspects of land-use planning.

Data and Materials

Organization

BC Ministry of Forests

No description provided

Additional Info

Field Value
Author A.J. Woods, D. Heppner, H.H. Kope, J. Burleigh, L. Maclauchlan
Publication Year 2010
Last Updated January 28, 2026, 19:09 (UTC)
Created January 28, 2026, 18:06 (UTC)