15 results
Search Results
2. Institutional determinants of profitable commercial forestry enterprises among First Nations in Canada.
- Author
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Trosper, Ronald, Nelson, Harry, Hoberg, George, Smith, Peggy, and Nikolakis, William
- Subjects
FORESTS & forestry ,NATURAL resources ,TREES ,LOGGING ,AGROFORESTRY ,BUSINESS forecasting ,PROFIT ,STRATEGIC alliances (Business) ,JOINT ventures - Abstract
This paper uses survey information to examine several common assertions about the institutional prerequisites for successful profitability when a First Nation enters an economic enterprise either independently or in joint effort with an outside firm. In the winter of 2004–2005, we interviewed managers on both the First Nations and private sides of joint ventures and other business alliances in Canada, to determine what affected their recent profitability experience. We gathered information on the ages, sizes, and activities of the firms. We also gathered information about the firms’ management structures and relationship with the First Nation, and the characteristics of the government of the First Nation. With a sample size of 40 firms that responded, we found that several institutional characteristics affected profit positively: strong separation of management from band governance, participation in management planning, and the use of staggered terms in band council elections. We found that the likelihood of profitability decreased if the band had been in third party management as well as if there was formal participation of elders or hereditary chiefs in decision making. We offer interpretations of these results. Cet article utilise les données d’un sondage réalisé au cours de l’hiver 2004–2005 afin d’examiner plusieurs assertions courantes au sujet des préalables institutionnels requis pour atteindre la profitabilité des entreprises initiées par des Premières nations agissant seules ou en partenariat avec des acteurs privés. Nous avons interviewé des gestionnaires impliqués dans de tels partenariats d’affaires au Canada et provenant tant des Premières nations que du secteur privé. Nous voulions déterminer ce qui affectait la profitabilité qu’ils avaient connue récemment. Nous avons rassemblé de l’information sur l’âge, la taille et les activités des entreprises. Nous avons aussi recueilli des données sur la structure de gestion des entreprises, les relations avec les Premières nations et les caractéristiques de la gouvernance en vigueur dans les communautés d’accueil. Un échantillon, regroupant les quarante entreprises qui ont répondu, nous permet d’observer que plusieurs caractéristiques institutionnelles, comme la séparation claire entre la gestion des projets et la gouvernance des communautés, la participation dans la planification managériale et le recours à des mandats échelonnés lors des élections au conseil de bande, affectent positivement les profits. Nous avons aussi remarqué que les chances de profitabilité diminuent si les conseils de bandes jouent un rôle en tant que de tierce partie dans la gestion des entreprises et si les aînés ou les chefs héréditaires participent formellement au processus décisionnel. Nous tentons d’interpréter ces résultats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. First Nations, forest lands, and “aboriginal forestry” in Canada: from exclusion to comanagement and beyond.
- Author
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Wyatt, Stephen
- Subjects
TREES ,FOREST management ,FORESTS & forestry ,AGRICULTURE ,SILVICULTURAL systems ,VEGETATION management - Abstract
The term “aboriginal forestry” is used increasingly to describe the evolving role of First Nations peoples in Canadian forestry over the last 30 years. This paper reviews a diversity of experiences and identifies issues that have important implications for governments, forest planners, and First Nations: a forestry regime that reflects the interests of governments and industry rather than those of First Nations; variable implementation of aboriginal rights in forestry practice; benefits and problems of economic partnerships; limitations on consultation, traditional knowledge, and comanagement in forestry; and finally, different forestry paradigms. Among these experiences and issues, we recognise different visions for the participation of First Nations peoples in Canadian forestry. At one end of the spectrum, “forestry excluding First Nations” is no longer accepted. The most common form may be “forestry by First Nations,” representing a role for First Nations within existing forestry regimes. Other options include “forestry for First Nations,” in which forest managers seek to incorporate aboriginal values and knowledge in management activities and “forestry with First Nations,” in which aboriginal peoples are equal partners in forest management. However, aboriginal forestry is better understood as a potential new form of forestry that uses knowledge and techniques drawn from both traditions and conventional forestry and is based on aboriginal rights, values, and institutions. Au Canada, le terme « foresterie autochtone »gagne en popularité pour décrire le rôle grandissant des Premières nations en foresterie au cours des trente dernières années. Cet article passe en revue de nombreuses expériences et identifie des enjeux aux conséquences importantes pour les gouvernements, les gestionnaires forestiers et les Premières nations. Un régime forestier qui reflète les intérêts des gouvernements et des industriels plutôt que ceux des Premières nations, la reconnaissance inégale des droits autochtones dans les pratiques forestières, les bénéfices et les problèmes associés aux partenariats d’affaires, les limites propres à la consultation, la place des savoirs traditionnels et de la cogestion en foresterie et enfin, la variété des paradigmes forestiers composent ces enjeux. Parmi ces expériences et enjeux, nous reconnaissons l’expression de différentes façons de concevoir la participation autochtone à la foresterie canadienne. À un bout du spectre, « une foresterie qui exclut les Premières nations »n’est plus une option acceptable. La vision la plus répandue est probablement celle d’« une foresterie par les Premières nations »signifiant que celles-ci ont un rôle à jouer dans les régimes forestiers existants. Une autre conception est celle de « la foresterie pour les Premières nations »lorsque les gestionnaires forestiers tentent d’intégrer des valeurs et des savoirs autochtones à leurs activités d’aménagement. Enfin, les situations où les autochtones sont partenaires à part entière dans l’aménagement de la forêt s’inscrivent sous la rubrique « la foresterie avec les Premières nations ». Cependant, la foresterie autochtone est mieux comprise lorsqu’elle implique la possibilité d’une nouvelle foresterie qui a recours à des savoirs et des techniques inspirés à la fois des traditions et de la foresterie conventionnelle et qui est fondée sur des droits, des valeurs et des institutions autochtones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Estimating impacts of resource management policies in the Foothills Model Forest .
- Author
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Patriquin, Mike N., Alavalapati, Janaki R.R., Wellstead, Adam M., Young, Suzanne M., Adamowicz, Wiktor L., and White, William A.
- Subjects
FORESTS & forestry ,TREES ,FOREST reserves - Abstract
Examines the economic impact of policy changes in a forested region of the province of Alberta known as the Foothills Model Forest (FMF). Effects of policy changes in various sectors that are analyzed in terms of all sectors of the regional economy with particular emphasis on the forestry sector; Study that uses a computable general equilibrium (CGE) framework rather than a fixed-price framework to analyze economy-wide impacts of land use or forest policy changes; Application of this technique on a regional scale that is rare in the scientific literature; Model results that indicate that a decrease in forestry output somewhat offsets the positive economic impact generated by increased visitor activity; Failure to consider these trade-off impacts in the analysis that will result in erroneous conclusions; Outcomes from timely policy scenarios that are examined; Results from the CGE framework that suggest that policy makers face a greater degree of complexity than in current economic impact frameworks.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Frequency of root grafting in naturally and artificially regenerated stands of Pinus banksiana: influence of site characteristics.
- Author
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Tarroux, Emilie and DesRochers, Annie
- Subjects
PLANT roots ,GRAFTING (Horticulture) ,JACK pine ,PLANT propagation ,ARABLE land ,TREES - Abstract
We investigated the frequency of root grafting in naturally and artificially regenerated stands of jack pine (Pinus banksiana Lamb.) in the western boreal forest of Quebec, Canada. Twelve 30–60 m
2 plots were hydraulically excavated to determine effects of site characteristics on frequency and timing of root grafting. Naturally regenerated stands had grafted tree percentages similar to artificially regenerated stands (21%–71% across plots) but greater numbers of root grafts per tree (naturally regenerated, 0.73 graft·tree–1 ; artificially regenerated, 0.52 graft·tree–1 ). Mean percentages of grafted trees, number of grafts per tree, and the speed of graft formation were greater in sandy soils (61%, 0.71 graft·tree–1 and 2.43 years, respectively) compared with clay soils (44%, 0.54 graft·tree–1 and 2.97 years, respectively). Proximity of trees was a better predictor of root grafting than stand density, despite many root grafts being found with distant trees (>2 m) in artificially regenerated stands. Our results suggested that root grafts form early in stand development. Even if trees are initially separate entities, this relatively high level of root grafting produces stands where trees are extensively interconnected. Nous avons étudié la fréquence des greffes racinaires dans des peuplements de pin gris (Pinus banksiana Lamb.) d’origines naturelle et artificielle dans la forêt boréale de l’ouest du Québec, au Canada. Douze parcelles de 30 à 60 m2 ont été excavées à l’aide d’un jet d’eau pour déterminer les effets des caractéristiques de la station sur la fréquence et la période de formation des greffes racinaires. Les peuplements régénérés naturellement avaient des pourcentages d’arbres greffés semblables à ceux des peuplements régénérés artificiellement (de 21 % à 71 % dans l’ensemble des placettes), mais avaient un plus grand nombre de greffes par arbre (régénérés naturellement : 0,73 greffe·arbre–1 ; régénérés artificiellement : 0,52 greffe·arbre–1 ). Le pourcentage moyen d’arbres greffés, le nombre de greffes par arbre et la vitesse de formation des greffes étaient plus élevés dans les sols sableux (respectivement 61 %, 0,71 greffe·arbre–1 et 2,43 années) que dans les sols argileux (respectivement 44 %, 0,54 greffe·arbre–1 et 2,97 années). La proximité des arbres était une meilleure variable prédictive des greffes racinaires que la densité des peuplements, même si plusieurs greffes racinaires ont été observées entre des arbres distants de plus de 2 m dans les peuplements régénérés artificiellement. Nos résultats indiquent que les greffes racinaires se forment tôt au cours du développement d’un peuplement. Même si les arbres sont des entités initialement séparées, le nombre relativement élevé de greffes racinaires produit des peuplements dans lesquels les arbres sont abondamment interconnectés. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Approximating natural landscape pattern using aggregated harvest.
- Author
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Carlson, Matthew and Kurz, Werner A.
- Subjects
LANDSCAPES ,TIMBER ,HARVESTING ,TREES ,NATIVE plant gardening ,LANDSCAPE gardening ,FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Forest Research is the property of Canadian Science Publishing and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Scale and spatial structure effects on tree size distributions: implications for growth and yield modelling.
- Author
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García, Oscar
- Subjects
MATHEMATICAL models of economic development ,PRODUCTION planning ,TREES ,FORESTS & forestry ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Forest Research is the property of Canadian Science Publishing and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Comparing site productivity of mature fire-origin and post-harvest juvenile lodgepole pine stands in Alberta.
- Author
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Shongming Huang, Monserud, Robert A., Braun, Thomas, Lougheed, Hugh, and Bakowsky, Olenka
- Subjects
LODGEPOLE pine ,PINE ,TREES ,PLANT development - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Forest Research is the property of Canadian Science Publishing and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Ageing and decline of trembling aspen stands in Quebec.
- Author
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Pothier, David, Raulier, Frédéric, and Riopel, Martin
- Subjects
ASPEN (Trees) ,TREES ,AGE of plants ,HARVESTING - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Forest Research is the property of Canadian Science Publishing and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Stream temperatures in two shaded reaches below cutblocks and logging roads: downstream cooling linked to subsurface hydrology.
- Author
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Story, A., Moore, R.D., and Macdonald, J.S.
- Subjects
HYDROGEOLOGY ,FORESTS & forestry ,TREES ,LOGGING roads ,STREAM measurements - Abstract
This study examined water temperature patterns and their physical controls for two small, clearing-heated streams in shaded reaches downstream of all forestry activity. Field observations were made during July-August 2000 in the central interior of British Columbia, Canada. For both reaches, downstream cooling of up to 4 Celsius had been observed during daytime over distances of ∼ 200 m. Radiative and convective exchanges of energy at heavily shaded sites on both reaches represented a net input of heat during most afternoons and therefore could not explain the observed cooling. In one stream, the greatest downstream cooling occurred when streamflow at the upstream site dropped below about 5 L · s[sup-1]. At those times, temperatures at the downstream site were controlled mainly by local inflow of groundwater, because the warmer water from upstream was lost by infiltration in the upper 150 m of the reach. Warming often occurred in the upper subreach, where cool groundwater did not interact with the channel. At the second stream, creek temperature patterns were comparatively stable. Energy balance estimates from one afternoon suggested that groundwater inflow caused about 40% of the ∼ 3 Celsius gross cooling effect in the daily maximum temperature, whereas bed heat conduction and hyporheic exchange caused about 60%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The effect of variable-retention riparian buffer zones on water temperatures in small headwater streams in sub-boreal forest ecosystems of British Columbia.
- Author
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Macdonald, J.S., MacIsaac, E.A., and Herunter, H.E.
- Subjects
TREES ,NATURAL resources ,FORESTS & forestry ,LOGGING ,TREE crops - Abstract
Stream temperature impacts resulting from forest harvesting in riparian areas have been documented in a number of locations in North America. As part of the Stuart-Takla Fisheries-Forestry Interaction Project, we have investigated the influence of three variable-retention riparian harvesting prescriptions on temperatures in first-order streams in the interior sub-boreal forests of northern British Columbia. Prescriptions were designed to represent a range of possible harvesting options outlined by the Forest Practices Code of B.C., or associated best management practice guidelines. Five years after the completion of harvesting treatments, temperatures remained four to six degrees warmer, and diurnal temperature variation remained higher than in the control streams regardless of treatment. Initially, the high-retention treatment acted to mitigate the temperature effects of the harvesting, but 3 successive years of windthrow was antecedent to reduced canopy density and equivalent temperature impacts. We speculate that late autumn reversals in the impacts of forest harvesting also occur. Temperature impacts in this study remained within the tolerance limits of local biota. However, even modest temperature changes could alter insect production, egg incubation, fish rearing, migration timing, and susceptibility to disease, and the effects of large changes to daily temperature range are not well understood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Chemical and mechanical site preparation: effects on Pinus contorta growth, physiology, and microsite quality on grassy, steep forest sites in British Columbia.
- Author
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Simard, Suzanne W., Jones, Melanie D., Durall, Daniel M., Hope, Graeme D., Stathers, Robert J., Sorensen, NaDene S., and Zimonick, Barbara J.
- Subjects
CONIFERS ,PINE ,TREES ,FREEZES (Meteorology) ,SOIL porosity ,FORESTS & forestry ,NATURAL resources - Abstract
Site preparation alleviates the effects of pinegrass (Calamagrostis rubescens Buckl.) interference on conifers in British Columbia, but little is known about interference mechanisms and appropriate site preparation methods for steep slopes. In this study, lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta Dougl. ex Loud.) was planted in pinegrass controls and small (90 x 90 cm) and large (180 x 90 cm) patches where (i) only pinegrass was removed using glyphosate or (ii) both pinegrass and the forest floor were removed using an excavator. Treatments were replicated three times in east- and west-facing clearcuts and effects were followed for 9 years. Two-year pine survival was 78% in the control and >97% in large patches. All patch treatments improved pine growth, but it was greatest in large chemical patches during the initial 6 years and in both large patch treatments thereafter. Removal of the forest floor reduced foliar and soil nutrients, increased bulk density and soil water availability, decreased porosity and aggregate stability, and reduced ectomycorrhizal diversity and richness. These changes were not observed in chemical patches. All patch treatments increased soil temperatures and reduced frost relative to controls, but more so in large patches. Pinegrass can suppress early pine performance, and large chemical patches that retain the forest floor are best for relieving the multiple environmental stressors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Effects of streamside logging on stream macroinvertebrate communities and habitat in the sub-boreal forests of British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Fuchs, Shirley A., Hinch, Scott G., and Mellina, Eric
- Subjects
TREES ,FORESTS & forestry ,LOGGING ,FOREST biomass ,NATURE reserves ,CONSERVATION of natural resources - Abstract
Much of the future timber supply in the Northern Hemisphere will come from boreal and sub-boreal forests, yet there has been little investigation of how aquatic communities in these regions would be affected by logging. We conducted an empirical, comparative study to investigate the effects of streamside clear-cut logging on benthic macroinvertebrates, algal standing stock, and in-stream physical and chemical habitats in the sub-boreal central interior region of British Columbia. We found that streams that flowed through old-growth forests (sites termed "not logged") did not differ from streams flowing through older logged forests (where the riparian zones were harvested 20-25 years before our sampling; sites termed "older logged") with respect to macroinvertebrate total density or biomass, feeding guild density or biomass, and chlorophyll a biomass. However, streams flowing through newly logged forests (where the riparian zones were harvested within 5 years of our sampling; sites termed "recently logged") had nearly twice the macroinvertebrate biomass as those in not logged or older logged sites and higher chlorophyll a biomass. There were no differences among the three stream categories in regard to structural aspects of the physical habitat (e.g., substrate composition, large organic debris density, dimensions of pools and riffles). Streamside logging in sub-boreal forests appears to enhance primary and secondary production, but this phenomenon may only be evident for the first two decades following logging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Are mixed-species stands more productive than single-species stands: an empirical test of three forest types in British Columbia and Alberta.
- Author
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Chen, H. Y. H., Klinka, K., Mathey, A.-H., Wang, X., Varga, P., and Chourmouzis, C.
- Subjects
FORESTS & forestry ,TREES ,ECOLOGY ,SOIL physics ,TREE physiology - Abstract
Examines the ecological combining ability of three forest types in British Columbia and Alberta. Factors that are related to the stand volume of tree species; Effect of one species on the productivity of another species; Details of the forest policy in British Columbia; Analysis of vegetation and soil physics in British Columbia and Alberta.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Aboveground and belowground biomass and sapwood area allometric equations for six boreal tree species of northern Manitoba.
- Author
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Bond-Lamberty, B., Wang, C., and Gower, S.T.
- Subjects
TREES ,PLANT biomass ,ALLOMETRY in plants - Abstract
Presents allometric equations describing biomass and sapwood area of several boreal tree species in Thompson, Manitoba. Measurement of stem diameter at the soil surface and breast height; Basis of the aboveground biomass relations; Irrelevance of soil drainage in the ratio of sapwood cross-sectional area to stem cross-sectional area.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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