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 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.

Data and Materials

Organization

University of British Columbia

No description provided

Additional Info

Field Value
Author K. Day, B. Blackwell, S. Wildeman
Publication Year 2010
Descriptive Location Williams Lake, Cariboo, Alex Fraser Research Forest
License License Not Specified
Last Updated October 2, 2025, 18:31 (UTC)
Created October 1, 2025, 22:20 (UTC)