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Areas Forest Management in British Columbia Parks and Protected Areas Presented by: Lyle Gawalko Forest Ecosystem Officer Ministry of Environment Parks and Protected Areas
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Presentation I.Forest Health/Natural Disturbance Factors II.MPB Control III.Forest Management Projects IV.Climate Change Adaptation
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I. Forest Health/Natural Disturbance Factors Climate Change (all Parks): Mountain Pine Beetle Western Pine Beetle (+20 Parks) Wildfires 1 park (avg.) burned “wall to wall” per year Windstorms 2006 – 44 Parks affected – approx $2 million in damages Other Forest Health Factors: Spruce Bark Beetle Douglas Fir Bark Beetle Spruce Bud Worm Drought/Root Rots etc Alien/Invasive Plants
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Spruce Budworm – Duffey Lake
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2007/08 T: 300,273.95 ha L: 225,124.15 ha M: 207,955.55 ha S: 101,199.69 ha V: 27,758 ha Total: 862,972.29 ha Trace < 1% 266,000 ha Light 1-10% 261,000 ha Moderate 11-30% 230,000 ha Severe 31-50% 71,000 ha Very Severe > 50% 18,000 ha 2006/07 MPB in Parks Total: 845,048 ha
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II.MPB Control – Prevent Spread to Southern Alberta 100 + Fall and Burn in Height of The Rockies. Robson control program once again this year. Planning for interprovincial prescribed burns
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Winter 06/07 915 Sites Probed G:R Ratio 1.35:1 Ave GA/site – 6 5,698 Green Attack F&B Winter 07/08 630 Sites Probed G:R Ratio 1.03:1 Ave GA/site - 3.7 Green Attack to date: 2755 (includes 75 2- year cycle trees Mount Robson Fall and Burn Program By the Numbers
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Mount Robson, - MPB Green Attack Sites Treated Winter 06/07 915 Sites Probed 628 Sites Treated G:R Ratio 0.8: 1 – 1.35:1 5,698 trees F&B
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III. Forest Management in Parks Campground MPB Hazard Tree and Fuel Removal Interface Fuel Reduction
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Manning Park Fuel Reduction/Public Safety
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Completed Tree Removal - 2007
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Bonnevier Fuel Break Feasibility Study Ecosystem Restoration objectives Promote the re- establishment of open forest stand conditions on the southern slopes Remove dead and dying pine to reduce fuel loading
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Completed 350 ha Fuel Break – Silver Star Park
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Urban Interface Fuel Reduction Ellison Park – Post Treatment
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Urban Interface Fuel Reduction
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Spider Hoe
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Portable Incinerator – Robson Park
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Since 2003, BC Parks has conducted 165 Ecosystem Management Projects, totalling $9,759,800
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Climate Change Management for Adaptation: Mitigate extreme natural disturbances where possible Reduce risks to public and adjacent communities Protect critical habitats Determine ecological “pinch points” and try to reduce stresses
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Mount Robson Fuel Break – Swift Currnet SW5 West Before
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Mount Robson Swift Current Fuel Break SW5 West AFTER
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SW3 Canopy BEFORE
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SW3Canopy AFTER
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Ecological Restoration/Ingrowth Removal – Premier Lake
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Grassland Restoration – Churn Creek - Before
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Grassland Restoration – Churn Creek - After
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Cataloguing in situ protection of genetic resources for major commercial forest trees in British Columbia Hamman et al. 2002 Due to a systematic expansion of protected areas in the 1990s, it appears that conifer genetic resources are now well represented in protected areas.
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Minimum reserve size of 270,000 ha Minimum reserve size as defined by Brent Gurd et al. ( Tom Nudds and Don Rivard) 2001. Conservation of mammals in eastern NA wildlife reserves: How small is too small? Conservation Biology 15: 1355 – 1363
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The End
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