Download Free Field Guide To Identification And Interpretation Of Hardwood Dominated Ecosystems In The Sbsdk And Ichmc2 Of The Prince Rupert Forest Region Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Field Guide To Identification And Interpretation Of Hardwood Dominated Ecosystems In The Sbsdk And Ichmc2 Of The Prince Rupert Forest Region and write the review.

The Forest Practices Code guidebooks help forest resource managers plan, prescribe and implement sound forest practices that comply with the Forest Practices Code. This guidebook is designed to be a "fine filter" approach to addressing habitat requirements of critical wildlife, in addition to the "coarse filter" approach provided by the Biodiversity Guidebook and the Riparian Management Area Guidebook.
Provides managers, planners and field staff with a recommended process for meeting biodiversity objectives - both landscape and stand level - as required under the Forest Practices Code.
Many terms often used to describe old-growth forests imply that these forests are less vigorous, less productive and less stable than younger forests. But research in the last two decades has yielded results that challenge the view of old-growth forests being in decline. Given the importance of forests in battling climate change and the fact that old-growth forests are shrinking at a rate of 0.5% per year, these new results have come not a moment too soon. This book is the first ever to focus on the ecosystem functioning of old-growth forests. It is an exhaustive compendium of information that contains original work conducted by the authors. In addition, it is truly global in scope as it studies boreal forests in Canada, temperate old-growth forests in Europe and the Americas, and global tropical forests. Written in part to affect future policy, this eminently readable book is as useful for the scientist and student as it is for the politician and politically-interested layman.
The Forest Practices Code guidebooks help forest resource managers plan, prescribe and implement sound forest practices that comply with the Forest Practices Code. This guidebook is intended to help forest managers meet Forest Practices Code standards with respect to planning, collecting, registering and using seed and vegetative material.
Stand density management is the process of controlling tree density within a stand to achieve desired objectives. Stand density management practices include the spacing of planted trees, pre-commercial thinning, and commercial thinning. A sound density management prescription must consider three elements of prediction: biological responses of the stand to treatment, economic implications of the treatment, and forest-level effects of the treatment. This document provides essential information on each of these elements, and provides a structured decision process for making site-specific density management prescriptions. Sections of the document cover the biological concepts of timber production, economic principles of timber production, forest planning considerations, the decision process, and density management planning tools. Includes glossary.
A stand management prescription is a document for describing actions to be carried out on a free-growing site to see that stand management activities are planned and implemented to maintain or enhance site productivity, to ensure that resource values are identified and taken into account, and to set out a series of stand management activities to produce a stand that meets the management objectives. This guide provides a logical sequence of steps on how to prepare and administer a stand management prescription in accordance with the Forest Practices Code of British Columbia. These steps include identification and collection of background information, setting of stand-level resource objectives, conducting fieldwork, preparation of the final prescription, production of the stand management prescription map, and administration.
This guide is designed to provide a reference for identifying, detecting, assessing, and treating pine stem rusts in managed forest stands. The major rusts covered in the guide are western gall rust (Endocronartium harknessii), Comandra blister rust (Cronartium comandrae), stalactiform blister rust (C. coleosporoides), sweet fern blister rust (C. comptoniae), and white pine blister rust (C. ribicola). It gives keys to identification and information on rust behaviour and stand dynamics, rust management techniques and treatments, and criteria used for assessing individual trees in a free-growing survey of rust damage. The appendix contains a table indicating stem rust hazard and risk by British Columbia forest region and guidelines for pruning of white pine.