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 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.

Data and Materials

Organization

BC Ministry of Forests

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Additional Info

Field Value
Publication Year 1993
License Other (Not open); Crown copyright (Province of British Columbia), all rights reserved
Last Updated January 28, 2026, 18:19 (UTC)
Created January 28, 2026, 18:19 (UTC)