Long-term silviculture experiments contribute to science-based forest management in British Columbia's public forests

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Abstract

Protests over clearcutting public forestlands have been a part of British Columbia’s forest policy scene for the last two decades. Pressure to modify silvicultural systems has resulted in the installation of a number of long-term silviculture experiments in British Columbia. In this paper we focus on how two of these experiments (MASS, Sicamous Creek) are being used to compare silvicultural systems, and to test hypotheses related to the retention of forest structure and the long-term influence of edges, aggregates and single trees on ecological processes. Results have shown that a given silvicultural treatment can have both negative and positive impacts depending on the values (e.g. regeneration, biodiversity,…

Citation impact

8
total citations
FWCI
0.00
Percentile
96%
References
9
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Silviculture
  • Forest management
  • Forestry
  • Geography
  • Snow
  • Index (typography)
  • Agroforestry
  • Environmental science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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