56 results
Search Results
2. Fluorescent pseudomonad population sizes baited from soils under pure birch, pure Douglas-fir, and mixed forest stands and their antagonism toward Armillaria ostoyae in vitro.
- Author
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DeLong, R.L., Lewis, Kathy J., Simard, Suzanne W., and Gibson, Susan
- Subjects
- *
ARMILLARIA root rot , *PAPER birch , *DOUGLAS fir , *PSEUDOMONADACEAE , *SEEDLINGS , *SOILS , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
The relationship between forest stand composition in southern interior British Columbia and fluorescent pseudomonad bacteria populations was investigated using seedling bioassays. The objectives of this study were to (i) compare the relative population sizes of fluorescent pseudomonads baited from soils in pure paper birch (Betula papyrifera Marsh.), pure Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii (Mirb.) Franco), and mixed stands of the two species and (ii) determine if fluorescent pseudomonads from these soils have inhibitory effects against the root pathogen Armillaria ostoyae (Romagn.) Herink in vitro. Soil from birch stands supported four times more pseudomonads on seedling baits than soil from Douglas-fir stands, with the mixed stands intermediate. Soil from young stands yielded twice as many rhizosphere pseudomonads as soil from mature stands. Pseudomonad population size was positively correlated with percent cover and density of birch, and negatively correlated with basal area of Douglas-fir, percent cover of Douglas-fir, and carbon/nitrogen ratio of the soil. Greater than 50% of the fluorescent isolates reduced radial growth of A. ostoyae by more than 20% and greater than 90% reduced biomass of the fungus in dual culture tests. Cell-free bacterial culture filtrates added to the growth medium also reduced growth of A. ostoyae. This study provides evidence that paper birch provides a more favorable environment for fluorescent pseudomonads than Douglas-fir and suggests a mechanism by which paper birch can positively influence the susceptibility of managed forest stands to Armillaria root disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Reconciliation in the woods? Three pathways towards forest justice.
- Author
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Nikolakis, William
- Subjects
- *
JUSTICE , *LOGGING , *FORESTS & forestry , *RECONCILIATION , *WOODEN beams , *INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
Forests are the locus of conflict in Canada, where the rights and interests of Indigenous peoples can collide with those of the province (Crown) and the forest industry. Efforts to achieve "forest justice" — or sufficient forest rights to meet the self-governance goals of Indigenous peoples, and in ways that ensure collective resilience — have typically been driven by the principle of reconciliation. In this paper, these "forest justice" efforts were examined through a tripartite justice theory, involving recognition, representation, and redistribution pathways. This paper documents that recognition involves Crown efforts to recognize Indigenous peoples' forest rights, including ownership, and access and use rights; representation includes improved participation in forest governance; and redistribution covers the allocation of timber harvesting rights and forest lands to Indigenous peoples. This study documents that the bulk of "forest justice" activity is focused on the redistribution of timber harvesting licences, the volume of which has doubled over the last two decades. These three paths to justice must all be pursued together to deliver "forest justice", and to move towards "reconciliation in the woods". Recommendations are offered to support forest justice in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Seed source testing of paper birch (Betula papyrifera) in the interior of British Columbia
- Author
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Berger, V. G., Hawkins, C. D. B., and Carlson, M. R.
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FORESTS & forestry , *PAPER birch , *BIOLOGICAL variation , *NUTRIENT cycles - Published
- 2000
5. Winning the paper chase.
- Author
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Headlam, B. and Stevenson, M.
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FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Explains how Canada's pulp and paper makers have grown fat on cheap trees, cheap power and political largesse, and describes how to make them more competitive in the 90s. Niche marketing; Embracing new technologies; Diversification; Modernization; Environmental pressure; What is weakening the industry; Integration; Globalization; Conservation.
- Published
- 1990
6. Scientific considerations and challenges for addressing cumulative effects in forest landscapes in Canada.
- Author
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Venier, L.A., Walton, R., and Brandt, J.P.
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ECOLOGICAL disturbances , *NATURAL resources , *DATA integration , *LANDSCAPES , *ACQUISITION of data , *FORESTS & forestry , *FOREST management - Abstract
Traditionally, forest management has focused on forestry-related practices whereas other industries have been managed separately. Forest management requires the integration of all natural resource development activities, along with other anthropogenic and natural forest disturbances (e.g., climate change, pollution, wildfire, pest disturbance) to understand how human activities can change forested ecosystems. The term cumulative effects has been used to describe these attempts to integrate all disturbances to develop an understanding of past, current, and future impacts on environmental, social, and economic components of the system. In this review, we focus on the science required to understand the past, current, and future impacts of the cumulative effects of anthropogenic and natural disturbances on forested ecosystems or their components. We have primarily focused on the terrestrial system with an emphasis on northern forests in Canada. Our paper is not intended to be a comprehensive review of all cumulative effects science but a synthesis of the challenges and approaches currently being used. Central repositories were identified as an approach to deal with issues of availability of remotely sensed data on anthropogenic and natural disturbances. Data integration projects, open data, and well-designed large-scale data collection efforts are needed to provide sufficient data on environmental responses to cumulative effects. As well, large-scale integrated, modularized ecosystem models are needed to bring stressor and environmental response data together to explore responses to, and interactions between, multiple stressors to project these effects into the future and to identify future data collection needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Paper birch genecology and physiology: spring dormancy release and fall cold acclimation
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Binder, Wolfgang D., Simpson, David G., and L'Hirondelle, Sylvia
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry , *PLANT physiology , *GROWTH rate - Published
- 2000
8. Forest Access Regimes: An Analysis of the Time and Space of Forest Use in Southeast Manitoba.
- Author
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Rytteri, Teijo and Sawatzky, Matthew
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- *
FORESTS & forestry , *FOREST products , *PAPER mills - Abstract
This article examines the politics of defining time and space as they relate to forest use; how industrial, First Nation, tourism, and environmental actors appropriate different scales of time and space; and what types of conflicts are caused by these differences. Using theories of access and Torsten Hägerstand's time-geography concepts as a starting point, we connect the classifications of capability, coupling, and authority constraints to an empirical analysis of forest use. The article also introduces a conceptual classification of adaptation, evasion, and modification strategies to cope with these constraints. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
9. Indigenous experiences with public advisory committees in Canadian forest management1.
- Author
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Nenko, Alemu, Parkins, John R., and Reed, Maureen G.
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry , *FOREST management , *NATURAL resources management , *ROYAL forests , *DECISION making - Abstract
Public advisory committees (PACs) are a dominant form of public participation in Canada's Crown forests, providing a venue in which members of the local public can engage and influence sustainable forest management decision-making. In this paper, we examine the experiences of Indigenous participants (relative to non-Indigenous participants) concerning the success of PAC processes. We focus on issues of fairness, equity, and inclusion of Indigenous voices along with an assessment of forest values diversity. Findings from surveys in 2004 and 2016 indicate statistically significant differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous PAC members regarding their forest values and their evaluation of the success of PAC processes. This work draws attention to the relative experiences of survey participants and the identification of persistent challenges associated with public engagement over the last two decades. Policy recommendations include substantial changes to how we define and measure sustainable forest management in Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Fire-regime changes in Canada over the last half century.
- Author
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Hanes, Chelene C., Xianli Wang, Jain, Piyush, Parisien, Marc-André, Little, John M., and Flannigan, Mike D.
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- *
FORESTS & forestry , *FOREST fires , *ECOLOGICAL zones , *BIOMES - Abstract
Contemporary fire regimes of Canadian forests have been well documented based on forest fire records between the late 1950s to 1990s. Due to known limitations of fire datasets, an analysis of changes in fire-regime characteristics could not be easily undertaken. This paper presents fire-regime trends nationally and within two zonation systems, the homogeneous fire-regime zones and ecozones, for two time periods, 1959–2015 and 1980–2015. Nationally, trends in both area burned and number of large fires (≥200 ha) have increased significantly since 1959, which might be due to increases in lightning-caused fires. Human-caused fires, in contrast, have shown a decline. Results suggest that large fires have been getting larger over the last 57 years and that the fire season has been starting approximately one week earlier and ending one week later. At the regional level, trends in fire regimes are variable across the country, with fewer significant trends. Area burned, number of large fires, and lightning-caused fires are increasing in most of western Canada, whereas human-caused fires are either stable or declining throughout the country. Overall, Canadian forests appear to have been engaged in a trajectory towards more active fire regimes over the last half century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Comparisons of fire weather indices using Canadian raw and homogenized weather data.
- Author
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Tsinko, Y., Bakhshaii, A., Johnson, E.A., and Martin, Y.E.
- Subjects
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FIRE weather , *ENVIRONMENTAL research , *FORESTS & forestry , *METEOROLOGICAL stations , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Modifications to the environment around a weather station or changes in instrument result in discontinuities or shift in weather data. This paper asks the often ignored questions such as, “what are the impacts of inhomogenized data?” and “does using homogenized weather data affect the conclusions of environmental research?” To answer these questions, we used the Canadian Forest Fire Weather Index (CFFWI) System for our studies. Weather station data are used to calculate wildfire danger indices. The homogenized data and raw (inhomogenized) observations for sixteen weather stations spread across Canada were used to calculate the CFFWI indices. The sixteen weather stations were further divided into three subset of stations based on the length of the accessible data during the fire season (April to end of September). The first set included stations that covered just 27 years of data and the second data sets had 49 years of data, while the third set included only five stations with the longest time period of 66 years. The majority of the stations, as measured by the Wilcoxon signed-rank test, rejected the null hypothesis (difference between the pairs follows a symmetric distribution around zero). The rejection rate increases to 100% as the length of data record increases from 27 to 66 years. Homogenization of 66 years data reduced the indices values approximately 0.7–8.4% and also reversed the long-term trend in some stations such as Kapuskasing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Canadian resource governance against territories: resource regimes and local conflicts in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence provinces.
- Author
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Dumarcher, Amélie and Fournis, Yann
- Subjects
- *
NATURAL resources , *COLLECTIVE action , *POLITICAL science , *FORESTS & forestry , *FISHERY management , *NON-self-governing territories - Abstract
This paper presents an analysis of fisheries and forestry governance in the Canadian provinces surrounding the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. It serves two purposes. The first is to produce a portrait of the trends challenging the hypothesis of a shrinking natural resources economy in these territories, in order to underline both the complexity of the struggles taking place around their ressourcist vocation, and the political tensions shaping the recasting of the extractivist model of development. The second, more theoretical and methodological contribution, is a reflection on the conceptual framework developed here: it aims to show the scope and utility of a combination of (1) a sectoral governance analysis and (2) a territorialized analysis of collective action around resource governance. This combination offers an interesting insight into the struggles and political tensions surrounding the tentative restructuring of the Canadian extractivist model. To do so, we examine the two sectoral trajectories showing signs of indecisiveness and adopt a territorial approach which reveals the numerous and various pressures on territories. A disconnection is thus observed between the sectoral and territorial levels: major frames of reference are gradually opening to encompass social and environmental issues, but this relative opening is not being directly and efficiently translated into practices, despite various innovations and indications of openness in governance processes. This fault line leads us to question the power relationships and power imbalances at work within these governance mechanisms and see how these scenes of struggle provide insights into the ambivalence of the current development trajectory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. An impact analysis of climate change on the forestry industry in Quebec.
- Author
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Boccanfuso, Dorothée, Savard, Luc, Goyette, Jonathan, Gosselin, Véronique, and Mangoua, Clovis Tanekou
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change , *FORESTS & forestry , *GROSS domestic product , *DYNAMICS , *ECONOMIC history - Abstract
Quebec's forests represent 20% of Canadian forests and 2% of the world forests. Over the entire planet, forests play a major role in habitat preservation and in supplying goods and services to the population. However, climate change will have an impact on the forest through inter alia increased droughts, forest fires, warmer weather, and infestations. In this paper, we analyze the economic impact of climate change on the forest industry in Quebec over a 40-year period using a recursive dynamic computable general equilibrium model. We find that the climate change effects will be relatively weak on most macroeconomic variables as agents adjust their behavior over time and factors are reallocated across sectors. We find that climate change could generate losses in gross domestic product of up to Can$300 million (0.12% of gross domestic product) at the end of a 40-year period for Quebec's economy. However, we find relatively more important effects within the sectors of the forest industry, with losses ranging from 3% to 7.5%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Pattern-based, multi-scale segmentation and regionalization of EOSD land cover.
- Author
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Niesterowicz, Jacek and Stepinski, Tomasz F.
- Subjects
- *
LAND cover , *FOREST mapping , *SUSTAINABLE development , *FORESTS & forestry , *GEOGRAPHIC information systems - Abstract
The Earth Observation for Sustainable Development of Forests (EOSD) map is a 25 m resolution thematic map of Canadian forests. Because of its large spatial extent and relatively high resolution the EOSD is difficult to analyze using standard GIS methods. In this paper we propose multi-scale segmentation and regionalization of EOSD as new methods for analyzing EOSD on large spatial scales. Segments, which we refer to as forest land units (FLUs), are delineated as tracts of forest characterized by cohesive patterns of EOSD categories; we delineated from 727 to 91,885 FLUs within the spatial extent of EOSD depending on the selected scale of a pattern. Pattern of EOSD's categories within each FLU is described by 1037 landscape metrics. A shapefile containing boundaries of all FLUs together with an attribute table listing landscape metrics make up an SQL-searchable spatial database providing detailed information on composition and pattern of land cover types in Canadian forest. Shapefile format and extensive attribute table pertaining to the entire legend of EOSD are designed to facilitate broad range of investigations in which assessment of composition and pattern of forest over large areas is needed. We calculated four such databases using different spatial scales of pattern. We illustrate the use of FLU database for producing forest regionalization maps of two Canadian provinces, Quebec and Ontario. Such maps capture the broad scale variability of forest at the spatial scale of the entire province. We also demonstrate how FLU database can be used to map variability of landscape metrics, and thus the character of landscape, over the entire Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. An introduction to Canada's boreal zone: ecosystem processes, health, sustainability, and environmental issues1.
- Author
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Brandt, J.P., Flannigan, M.D., Maynard, D.G., Thompson, I.D., and Volney, W.J.A.
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE forestry , *FORESTS & forestry , *TAIGAS , *ECOSYSTEMS , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *WATER power , *GLACIATION - Abstract
The boreal zone and its ecosystems provide numerous provisioning, regulating, cultural, and supporting services. Because of its resources and its hydroelectric potential, Canada's boreal zone is important to the country's resource-based economy. The region presently occupied by Canada's boreal zone has experienced dramatic changes during the past 3 million years as the climate cooled and repeated glaciations affected both the biota and the landscape. For about the past 7000 years, climate, fire, insects, diseases, and their interactions have been the most important natural drivers of boreal ecosystem dynamics, including rejuvenation, biogeochemical cycling, maintenance of productivity, and landscape variability. Layered upon natural drivers are changes increasingly caused by people and development and those related to human-caused climate change. Effects of these agents vary spatially and temporally, and, as global population increases, the demands and impacts on ecosystems will likely increase. Understanding how humans directly affect terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems in Canada's boreal zone and how these effects and actions interact with natural disturbance agents is a prerequisite for informed and adaptive decisions about management of natural resources, while maintaining the economy and environment upon which humans depend. This paper reports on the genesis and present condition of the boreal zone and its ecosystems and sets the context for a detailed scientific investigation in subsequent papers published in this journal on several key aspects: carbon in boreal forests; climate change consequences, adaptation, and mitigation; nutrient and elemental cycling; protected areas; status, impacts, and risks of non-native species; factors affecting sustainable timber harvest levels; terrestrial and aquatic biodiversity; and water and wetland resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Aboriginal/non-Aboriginal relations and sustainable forest management in Canada: The influence of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples
- Author
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McGregor, Deborah
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE forestry , *ABORIGINAL Canadians , *FOREST policy , *FORESTS & forestry , *INTERNATIONAL cooperation - Abstract
This paper provides an overview of the emerging role of Aboriginal people in Sustainable Forest Management (SFM) in Canada over the past decade. The 1996 Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (RCAP) provided guidance and recommendations for improving Aboriginal peoples'' position in Canadian society, beginning with strengthening understanding and building relationships between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal parties. This paper explores the extent to which advances in Aboriginal/non-Aboriginal relationships and Aboriginal forestry have been made as a result of RCAP's call for renewed relationships based on co-existence among nations. Such changes have begun to alter the context in which Aboriginal/non-Aboriginal relationships exist with respect to SFM. While governments themselves have generally not demonstrated the leadership called for by RCAP in taking up these challenges, industry and other partners are demonstrating some improvements. A degree of progress has been achieved in terms of lands and resources, particularly with co-management-type arrangements, but a fundamental re-structuring needed to reflect nation-to-nation relationships has not yet occurred. Other factors related to increasing Aboriginal participation in SFM, such as the recognition of Aboriginal and treaty rights, are also highlighted, along with suggestions for moving Aboriginal peoples'' SFM agenda forward in the coming years. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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17. Habitat requirements of the Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Sphyrapicus varius, in boreal mixedwood forests of northwestern Canada.
- Author
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Savignac, C. and Machtans, C. S.
- Subjects
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HABITATS , *YELLOW-bellied sapsucker , *FORAGE plants , *POPULUS tremuloides , *PAPER birch , *ALDER , *FORESTS & forestry , *HEARTWOOD - Abstract
Despite its role as a keystone species, few studies have investigated the habitat requirements of the Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (Sphyrapicus varius (L., 1766)) in the northwestern part of its range, where the current forest harvesting rotation schedule and targets for reducing the prevalence of old and mixedwood stands may reduce the optimal habitat for this species. We studied nesting and foraging habitat requirements of nesting sapsuckers in a boreal mixedwood forest of northwestern Canada by collecting data on nesting sites and foraging substrates on twenty-four 16- to 56-ha plots distributed among four habitat types in 1998 and 2002. Nests (n = 68) were generally found in large (≥22 cm diameter at breast height) trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx) that were alive but declining and that showed high incidence (81.1%) of heartwood rot infection (Phellinus tremulae (Bondarzev) Bondarzev & Borisov in Bondarzev). Nest-site use by sapsuckers was predicted mainly by the presence of external fungal conks and tree diameter. Among tree species used as foraging substrates, paper birch (Betula papyrifera Marsh.) (65.6%) and green alder (Alnus viridis (Vill.) Lam. & DC.) (21.3%) were used most frequently. The use of birch was strongly correlated with its availability. Mature forests had higher densities of nesting sites and foraging substrates than immature aspen stands. In addition to reconfirming the importance of mature mixedwood forests for Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers, our study also indicates that forest harvest rotations in northwestern Canada should exceed 90 years to promote the keystone role of this species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Participatory decision support for sustainable forest management: a framework for planning with local communities at the landscape level in Canada.
- Author
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Sheppard, Stephen R. J.
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE forestry , *FOREST management , *DECISION making , *SOCIAL support , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
There is an increasing demand for active public involvement in forestry decision making, but there are as yet few established models for achieving this in the new sustainable forest management (SFM) context. At the level of the working forest, the fields of forest sustainability assessment, public participation, decision support, and computer technology in spatial modelling and visualization need to be integrated. This paper presents the results of a literature review of public participation and decision-support methods, with emphasis on case study examples in participatory decision support. These suggest that emerging methods, such as public multicriteria analysis of alternative forest management scenarios and allied tools, may lend themselves to public processes addressing sustainability criteria and indicators. The paper develops a conceptual framework for participatory decision support to address the special needs of SFM in tactical planning at the landscape level. This framework consists of principles, process criteria, and preliminary guidelines for designing and evaluating SFM planning processes with community input. More well-documented studies are needed to develop comprehensive, engaging, open, and accountable processes that support informed decision making in forest management, and to strengthen guidance for managers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Characteristics of forest legacies following two mountain pine beetle outbreaks in British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Alfaro, René I., van Akker, Lara, and Hawkes, Brad
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry , *MOUNTAIN pine beetle , *INSECT-plant relationships , *FOREST dynamics , *FOREST canopies - Abstract
The mountain pine beetle, Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopkins (Coleoptera, Curculionidae), a native insect of North America, periodically reaches population sizes that cause serious economic impact to the forest industry in western North America. The most recent outbreak in British Columbia (BC), Canada, which began in the late 1990s, is only now (2015) abating, after causing unprecedented tree mortality in lodgepole pine ( Pinus contorta Douglas ex. Loudon) forests. In this paper, we make use of permanent research plots to report on the condition of lodgepole pine forests in the Chilcotin Plateau of central BC, which underwent two fully documented mountain pine beetle outbreaks. In this region, the first outbreak started in the late 1970s and lasted until the mid-1980s; the second outbreak began in the early 2000s and ended in 2010. We measured the impacts of these outbreaks in terms of tree mortality and describe the characteristics of the legacies that remain following these outbreaks, including survivors in various canopy layers and levels of existing and new regeneration. We provide evidence in support of the existence of postdisturbance legacies that classify into five distinct stand structure types. Abundant regeneration and surviving intermediate canopy layers in most stands indicate that management actions to restock pine stands in this area will not likely be necessary. The information provided by this study is important for estimating future forest development and timber supply and for forest planning and management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Forest Products and Circular Economy Strategies: A Canadian Perspective.
- Author
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Gagnon, Bruno, Tanguay, Xavier, Amor, Ben, and Imbrogno, Anthony F.
- Subjects
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FOREST products , *FORESTS & forestry , *WOOD , *FOREST products industry , *WASTE management , *LUMBER , *CIRCULAR economy - Abstract
The Government of Canada has embraced circular economy and is supporting an increasing number of initiatives in the field. However, implementation examples remain scattered and certain stakeholders are eager to see a greater level of commitment from policy makers. The purpose of this study is to provide a Canadian perspective on how, and to what extent, forest products are compatible with circular economy strategies. This topic was investigated through interviews with 16 Canadian experts in eco-design, circular economy, forest products and/or waste management, with a focus on construction and packaging. Efforts made by forest industries at the manufacturing stage to reduce resource consumption were acknowledged, but the implementation of other circular economy strategies, such as reuse, recycling and energy recovery, is uneven. While there is low-hanging fruit for incremental improvements, such as the processing of recovered lumber in wood panels and not mixing cardboard fibres with other paper streams to avoid downcycling, several barriers to the widespread adoption of the most promising strategies were identified. The experts consulted proposed several solutions to accelerate the deployment of circular economy strategies for forest products, for which government interventions would need to be tailored to the different policy readiness levels (PRLs) observed in the construction and packaging sectors. With circularity having economy-wide implications, setting a clear policy direction at the national level, with a circular economy roadmap for Canada for example, could accelerate coordinated implementation within and across sectors, including forest industries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Impacts and prognosis of natural resource development on aquatic biodiversity in Canada's boreal zone1.
- Author
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Kreutzweiser, David, Beall, Frederick, Webster, Kara, Thompson, Dean, and Creed, Irena
- Subjects
- *
CONSERVATION of natural resources , *AQUATIC biodiversity , *TAIGAS , *FORESTS & forestry , *WATERSHEDS , *FOREST management - Abstract
Conservation efforts to sustain water resources and aquatic biodiversity in boreal watersheds will require reliable information on the recent status of various indicator species and an improved understanding of the risks to aquatic biodiversity posed by resource development activities. We reviewed the recent state of knowledge on the responses of aquatic biodiversity to forest management, pulp and paper mill effluents, hydroelectric impoundments, mining of minerals and metals, oil sands extractions, and peat mining and offer a prognosis for aquatic biodiversity under each of these environmental stressors. Despite the prevalence of natural resource development in Canada's largest forest ecosystem, there was a limited amount of published literature on the effects of many of the disturbance types on various indicators of aquatic biodiversity, making it difficult to produce a current and reliable status assessment. Across most of the boreal zone, there is a lack of coordinated, consistent data collection for many of the bioindicators and disturbance types discussed in this review. Forecasting the future state of aquatic biodiversity across the boreal zone is challenged by increasing natural resource development and its interactions with other stressors, especially climate change. The cumulative effects of multiple stressors coupled with resource development activities in boreal watersheds remain largely unknown. More importantly, the ecological thresholds for these cumulative effects (that is, the point at which aquatic ecosystems and their biodiversity cannot recover to a desired state within a reasonable time frame) are also unknown and remain gaps in our knowledge. The recent literature identifies a number of risks to aquatic biodiversity at local (tens of square kilometres) to regional (hundreds of square kilometres) scales associated with natural resource development. There are indications that many of these risks can be minimized by 'greener' technologies for resource development and reclamation, practical conservation planning and regulation, and increased stewardship in watershed management, although the effectiveness of many of these measures cannot yet be assessed from the published literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. 'How far do you have to walk to find peace again?': A case study of First Nations' operational values for a community forest in Northeast British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Booth, Annie L. and Muir, Bruce R.
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry , *COMMUNAL natural resources , *MANAGEMENT science , *AGRICULTURE - Abstract
In this paper we report upon research conducted with two First Nations located in British Columbia, Canada (Saulteau First Nations and West Moberly First Nations) on their preferences regarding forest operations within their community forest license. We confirmed the forestry-related values previously documented in other research, and we are able to determine specific parameters with regard to the protection or integration of these values, particularly those that are ecologically based. In addition, we identify significant cultural values expected in forestry planning and management, their parameters, as well as values not commonly discussed within the literature, such as concerns over non-indigenous access and conflicting, overlapping resource tenures. We conclude that further research, which accounts for and readily accommodates indigenous values and preferences, is needed to examine North American indigenous participation in both community forest tenures and in developing forest operation planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Assessing the potential for collaborative governance to support cumulative effects assessment in the Indigenous Cree territory of Eeyou Istchee, Canada.
- Author
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Che, Tian Qi and Hickey, Gordon M.
- Subjects
- *
WILDLIFE monitoring , *COMMUNITY forestry , *ANIMAL populations , *SUSTAINABLE development , *WILD foods , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
This paper explores the potential for collaborative governance approaches to support Cumulative Effects Assessment (CEA) in the Cree territory of Eeyou Istchee, located in Northern Quebec, Canada, where a long history of large-scale hydroelectricity development, mining and forestry activities have negatively affected wildlife populations, imposing burdens on the traditional food systems and livelihoods of local Indigenous communities. Drawing on key informant interviews with policy actors from government, non-government and private sector organizations working on Impact Assessment in Eeyou Istchee, the potential for more decentralized and networked approaches to regional wildlife monitoring and baseline data collection in support of CEA is considered. Results suggest a shared willingness to collaborate towards improving the overall regional environmental conditions and to generate long-term data on wildlife population and distribution. Challenges include the absence of essential supporting programs (land-use plans, regional environmental frameworks, lead monitoring agencies, designated funding), and high levels of distrust between proponents and NGOs which combine to suppress the initiation of collaborative governance processes as well as the potential utility of any regional monitoring program that might be established. The need for leadership to facilitate reciprocal knowledge flows among actors, build trust and enable long-term cooperative structures based on a shared vision and goal congruency is identified. • Traditional wild food species are core to sustainable development in Eeyou Istchee. • Cumulative effects (CE) of development are negatively impacting traditional foods. • Could collaborative governance approaches enhance regional wildlife monitoring? • A foundation for the collaborative governance of wildlife monitoring is identified. • Policy experimentation with collaborative approaches to monitoring is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Collaboration between Aboriginal peoples and the Canadian forest sector: A typology of arrangements for establishing control and determining benefits of forestlands
- Author
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Wyatt, Stephen, Fortier, Jean-François, Natcher, David C., Smith, Margaret A. (Peggy), and Hébert, Martin
- Subjects
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POLITICAL participation of indigenous peoples , *CITIZEN participation in forest management , *LOGGING laws , *ECOSYSTEM services , *ENVIRONMENTAL management , *ABORIGINAL Canadians , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Over the last thirty years, Aboriginal peoples, forestry companies and governments in Canada have developed a wide variety of arrangements and mechanisms aimed at fostering collaboration and establishing an increasing Aboriginal role in managing and harvesting forestlands. This paper seeks to facilitate the analysis and investigation of various forms of collaboration by presenting a typology based upon institutional arrangements and desired outcomes. Development of the typology followed an iterative process of categorisation, description, testing and revision, using scientific and grey literature combined with testing against an ever-widening number of communities; firstly in Quebec, then in six provinces and finally with 474 communities across the country. We identify five principal forms of collaborative arrangement, each with a number of sub-types: treaties and other formal agreements that establish roles and responsibilities; planning and management activities; influence on decision-making; forest tenures; and economic roles. The application and utility of this typology is illustrated through the examples of four communities, each of which is engaged in several different collaborative arrangements. The typology demonstrates the variety of arrangements that are available to encourage Aboriginal involvement in Canada's forest sector while also provided a basis for future work in comparing the benefits of different arrangements or in analysing the effectiveness of policies. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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25. Evaluating the social capital accrued in large research networks: The case of the Sustainable Forest Management Network (1995-2009).
- Author
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Klenk, Nicole L., Hickey, Gordon M., and MacLellan, James Ian
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL capital , *FORESTS & forestry , *FOREST management , *SOCIAL networks , *SUSTAINABLE forestry , *SUSTAINABILITY , *ACADEMIC-industrial collaboration - Abstract
This paper examines the social capital that evolved in the Sustainable Forest Management Network (SFMN), one of the Canadian Networks of Centres of Excellence. Our longitudinal study shows a sevenfold increase in the total number of researchers and a high density of relationships among (researchers from) provinces across the country. The results of a social network analysis revealed that 52.6 percent of the network researchers maintained the same number of collaborators while 46.7 percent increased their number of collaborators enormously: the maximum increase in number of collaborators being 6900 percent and the minimum 6 percent. A bibliometric analysis suggested that the number of publications was strongly correlated to measures of social capital. From a science and innovation policy perspective, the finding that more than half of the researchers in the SFMN did not increase their personal networks of collaborators raises important questions. A theoretical model is proposed to examine whether funding agencies should focus on fostering various network structures and evolutions or rely on competition in the distribution of research funds through networks. The proposed model is designed to measure the impact of various network structures on the development of social capital and research output. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Tradeoffs between forestry resource and conservation values under alternate policy regimes: A spatial analysis of the western Canadian boreal plains
- Author
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Hauer, Grant, Cumming, Steve, Schmiegelow, Fiona, Adamowicz, Wiktor, Weber, Marian, and Jagodzinski, Robert
- Subjects
- *
SPATIAL analysis (Statistics) , *ECOLOGICAL economics , *FOREST policy , *ECOSYSTEM services , *FOREST management , *CONSERVATION of natural resources , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
An important element of resource management and conservation is an understanding of the tradeoffs between marketed products, such as timber, and measures of environmental quality, such as biodiversity. In this paper, we develop an integrated economic-ecological spatial optimization model that we then apply to evaluate alternate forest policies on a 560,000km2 study region of managed boreal forest in Alberta and British Columbia, Canada. The integrated model incorporates dynamic forest sector harvesting, current levels of oil and gas sector development, coarse-filter or habitat-based old forest indicators, a set of empirical forest bird abundance models, and statistical models of the natural and current fire regimes. Using our integrated model, economic tradeoff curves, or production possibility frontiers, are developed to illustrate the cost of achieving coarse-filter targets by a set time (50 years) within a 100-year time horizon. We found levels of ecological indicators and economic returns from the timber industry could both be increased if spatial constraints imposed by the current policy environment were relaxed; other factors being equal, this implies current policy should be revised. We explore the production possibility frontier's relationship to the range of natural variation of old forest habitat, and show how this range can be used to guide choices of preferred locations along the frontier. We also show that coarse-filter constraints on the abundance of certain habitat elements are sufficient to satisfy some fine-filter objectives, expressed as the predicted abundances of various species of songbirds. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Tree-ring evidence of larch sawfly outbreaks in western Labrador, Canada.
- Author
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Nishimura, Peter H. and Laroque, Colin P.
- Subjects
- *
TREE-rings , *LARCH sawfly , *BLACK spruce , *DEFOLIATION , *DENDROCHRONOLOGY , *INSECT-plant relationships , *INSECTS , *FORESTS & forestry , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
As many insect outbreak reconstructions are typically based on targeted single-site sampling, researchers have often been limited in their ability to draw conclusions about regional trends as opposed to local trends in the data. The results of this paper demonstrate the value of a systematic sampling design when studying spatio-temporal processes that can vary greatly within large continuous areas of forest. Many single-site research programs have been conducted to reconstruct the history of larch sawfly (Pristiphora erichsonii Htg.) outbreaks in the eastern boreal region of North America. However, no such research has yet been conducted in the region of Labrador. In an attempt to illustrate the strength of a systematic gridded sampling protocol over a single-site study, we sampled a 12-site grid in western Labrador. Dominant and codominant species were sampled at each grid point, resulting in 24 master chronologies. Six eastern larch (Larix laricina (Du Roi) K. Koch) chronologies (host) and a regional black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) Britton, Sterns, Poggenb.) chronology (nonhost) were used to establish a host–nonhost analysis of past sawfly outbreaks on a regional scale. Both regional and localized larch sawfly outbreaks were identified, but in general, larch sawfly outbreaks in western Labrador appeared to be spatially synchronous and regional in scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Evaluating Potential of MODIS-based Indices in Determining "Snow Gone" Stage over Forest-dominant Regions.
- Author
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Sekhon, Navdeep S., Hassan, Quazi K., and Sleep, Robert W.
- Subjects
- *
FOREST fire research , *FORESTS & forestry , *ENVIRONMENTAL indicators , *MODIS (Spectroradiometer) , *FOREST fire ecology , *INFRARED spectroscopy , *PROBABILITY measures - Abstract
"Snow gone" (SGN) stage is one of the critical variables that describe the start of the official forest fire season in the Canadian Province of Alberta. In this paper, our objective is to evaluate the potential of MODIS-based indices for determining the SGN stage. Those included: (i) enhanced vegetation index (EVI), (ii) normalized difference water index (NDWI) using the shortwave infrared (SWIR) spectral bands centered at 1.64 μm (NDWI1.64μm) and at 2.13 μm (NDWI2.13μm), and (iii) normalized difference snow index (NDSI). These were calculated using the 500 m 8-day gridded MODIS-based composites of surface reflectance data (i.e., MOD09A1 v.005) for the period 2006-08. We performed a qualitative evaluation of these indices over two forest fire prone natural subregions in Alberta (i.e., central mixedwood and lower boreal highlands). In the process, we generated and compared the natural subregion-specific lookout tower sites average: (i) temporal trends for each of the indices, and (ii) SGN stage using the ground-based observations available from Alberta Sustainable Resource Development. The EVI-values were found to have large uncertainty at the onset of the spring and unable to predict the SGN stages precisely. In terms of NDSI, it showed earlier prediction capabilities. On the contrary, both of the NDWI's showed distinct pattern (i.e., reached a minimum value before started to increase again during the spring) in relation to observed SGN stages. Thus further analysis was carried out to determine the best predictor by comparing the NDWI's predicted SGN stages with the ground-based observations at all of the individual lookout tower sites (approximately 120 in total) across the study area. It revealed that NDWI2.13μm demonstrated better prediction capabilities (i.e., on an average approximately 90% of the observations fell within ±2 periods or ±16 days of deviation) in comparison to NDWI1.64μm (i.e., on an average approximately 73% of the observations fell within ±2 periods or ±16 days of deviation). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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29. "THIS WASTEFUL USE OF A RIVER": Log Driving, Conservation, and British Columbia's Stellako River Controversy, 1965-72.
- Author
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RAJALA, RICHARD A.
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- *
LOG driving , *RIVERS , *FORESTS & forestry , *CONSERVATION of natural resources -- Government policy ,CANADIAN federal government ,HISTORY of British Columbia - Abstract
The article discusses an environmental controversy in northern British Columbia in the 1960s over log driving on the Stellako River. The conflict is seen on one level as a dispute between the federal government of Canada, which wanted to protect salmon spawning grounds, and the provincial government of British Columbia, which defended the interests of the forestry, logging, and pulp and paper industries. Also opposing the log drives were sportsmen, conservationists, and tourism interests. Debates over appropriate use of the river are seen as symbolic of changes in British Columbian society in the postwar era.
- Published
- 2010
30. Stand structure and dynamics of Picea mariana on the northern border of the natural closed boreal forest in Quebec, Canada.
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Rossi, Sergio, Tremblay, Marie-Josée, Morin, Hubert, and Levasseur, Valérie
- Subjects
- *
BLACK spruce , *TAIGAS , *FORESTS & forestry , *FOREST density , *TREE age , *TREE development , *AIR layering , *PLANT propagation - Abstract
The boreal forest of higher latitudes constitutes a reservoir of trees of great ecological importance and unknown economic potential, but the stand dynamics in these regions still remain essentially unexplored. This paper examines the change in age and size structures during stand development on the northern border of the natural closed boreal forest in Quebec, Canada. Height, diameter, and age of trees were measured in 18 plots with stand ages between 77 and 340 years. The occurrence, size, and origin (layer or seed) of seedlings and saplings were assessed in subplots. Tree density ranged from 600 to 3750 trees·ha–1. Picea mariana (Mill.) BSP was the dominant species, mainly originating by layering. A cluster analysis segregated plots into even-aged and uneven-aged stands according to tree age, but size distribution of trees, saplings, and seedlings did not differ statistically between the two groups. Even-aged stands exhibited a 60% probability of assuming an uneven-aged structure between 120 and 200 years after stand initiation. At high latitudes, the closed boreal forest of P. mariana appears homogeneously sized, with similar distributions of diameter and height across all stages of stand development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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31. Potential changes in monthly fire risk in the eastern Canadian boreal forest under future climate change.
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Le Goff, Héloïse, Flannigan, Mike D., and Bergeron, Yves
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- *
TAIGAS , *FORESTS & forestry , *FOREST fires , *WILDFIRES , *CLIMATE change , *FIRE weather , *SUSTAINABLE development , *FOREST management - Abstract
The main objective of this paper is to evaluate whether future climate change would trigger an increase in the fire activity of the Waswanipi area, central Quebec. First, we used regression analyses to model the historical (1973–2002) link between weather conditions and fire activity. Then, we calculated Fire Weather Index system components using 1961–2100 daily weather variables from the Canadian Regional Climate Model for the A2 climate change scenario. We tested linear trends in 1961–2100 fire activity and calculated rates of change in fire activity between 1975–2005, 2030–2060, and 2070–2100. Our results suggest that the August fire risk would double (+110%) for 2100, while the May fire risk would slightly decrease (–20%), moving the fire season peak later in the season. Future climate change would trigger weather conditions more favourable to forest fires and a slight increase in regional fire activity (+7%). While considering this long-term increase, interannual variations of fire activity remain a major challenge for the development of sustainable forest management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Influence of Context on Deliberation and Cooperation in Community-Based Forest Management in Ontario, Canada.
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Robson, Mark and Kant, Shashi
- Subjects
- *
FOREST management , *DELIBERATION , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
The development of cooperation depends on the nature of deliberations among and between local stakeholders and the state as well as the context of deliberations, especially whether larger scale governance helps, hinders or overrides deliberative processes. However, the context of deliberations has not been a focus of past research on deliberation. The paper identifies the key context criteria that influenced deliberation and the development of cooperation in a comparative case study of two forest advisory committees in Ontario, Canada. The study uses cognitive mapping and network analysis techniques to identify key context criteria and concludes with five inferences regarding the influence of context on deliberation and cooperation that have implications for deliberation and decentralization theories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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33. CBM-CFS3: A model of carbon-dynamics in forestry and land-use change implementing IPCC standards
- Author
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Kurz, W.A., Dymond, C.C., White, T.M., Stinson, G., Shaw, C.H., Rampley, G.J., Smyth, C., Simpson, B.N., Neilson, E.T., Trofymow, J.A., Metsaranta, J., and Apps, M.J.
- Subjects
- *
ECOLOGICAL models , *ECOSYSTEM management , *LAND use & the environment , *FOREST surveys , *ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring , *CARBON sequestration , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
The scientific community, forest managers, environmental organizations, carbon-offset trading systems and policy-makers require tools to account for forest carbon stocks and carbon stock changes. In this paper we describe updates to the Carbon Budget Model of the Canadian Forest Sector (CBM-CFS3) implemented over the past years. This model of carbon-dynamics implements a Tier 3 approach of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Good Practice Guidance for reporting on carbon stocks and carbon stock changes resulting from Land Use, Land-use Change and Forestry (LULUCF). The CBM-CFS3 is a generic modelling framework that can be applied at the stand, landscape and national levels. The model provides a spatially referenced, hierarchical system for integrating datasets originating from different forest inventory and monitoring programs and includes a structure that allows for tracking of land areas by different land-use and land-use change classes. Ecosystem pools in CBM-CFS3 can be easily mapped to IPCC-defined pools and validated against field measurements. The model uses sophisticated algorithms for converting volume to biomass and explicitly simulates individual annual disturbance events (natural and anthropogenic). Several important scientific updates have been made to improve the representation of ecosystem structure and processes from previous versions of CBM-CFS. These include: (1) an expanded representation of dead organic matter and soil carbon, particularly standing dead trees, and a new algorithm for initializing these pools prior to simulation, (2) a change in the input data requirement for simulating growth from biomass to readily available merchantable volume curves, and new algorithms for converting volume to biomass, (3) improved prediction of belowground biomass, and (4) improved parameters for soil organic matter decay, fire, insect disturbances, and forest management. In addition, an operational-scale version of CBM-CFS3 is freely... [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Simulating carbon exchange in Canadian Boreal forests: I. Model structure, validation, and sensitivity analysis
- Author
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Zhou, Xiaolu, Peng, Changhui, Dang, Qing-Lai, Sun, Jianfeng, Wu, Haibin, and Hua, Dong
- Subjects
- *
TAIGA ecology , *CARBON dioxide , *GAS exchange in plants , *SIMULATION methods & models , *BLACK spruce , *ALGORITHMS , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Abstract: This paper will discuss TRIPLEX-Flux, a process-based model that estimates net ecosystem production (NEP) as well as analyzing the level of sensitivity of the model''s response by simulating CO2 flux in an existing old black spruce BOREAS site in central Canada. The research objectives were: (1) to test the TRIPLEX-Flux model simulations against flux tower measurements; and (2) to examine parameter and input variable effects on model response via sensitivity analysis. Validation of NEP data at 30min intervals derived from tower and chamber measurements showed that the NEP data from the model corresponded well with the measured NEP from the BOREAS site (R 2 >0.65). Sensitivity analysis demonstrated different levels of sensitivity between morning and noon periods and from the current to doubled atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Additionally, the comparison of different algorithms to calculate stomatal conductance showed that the NEP predicted by the model using the iteration algorithm was consistent with the results using a constant C i/C a of 0.74 for current and 0.81 for doubled CO2 concentrations. Varying parameter and input variable values by ±10% resulted in a similar model response between morning and noon periods (less than or equal to 27.6% and 27.4%, respectively). Most parameters were more sensitive at noon than they were in the morning except for those that were correlated with air temperature, suggesting that air temperature has considerable influence over model sensitivity for these parameters/variables. Air temperature effect was greater under doubled than it was under current atmospheric CO2 concentrations. In contrast, model sensitivity to CO2 decreased under doubled CO2 concentrations. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. 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
36. 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
37. Integrating profiling LIDAR with Landsat data for regional boreal forest canopy attribute estimation and change characterization
- Author
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Wulder, Michael A., Han, Tian, White, Joanne C., Sweda, Tatsuo, and Tsuzuki, Hayato
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry , *OPTICAL radar , *FOREST dynamics , *REMOTE sensing , *FOREST canopies - Abstract
Forest dynamics are characterized by both continuous (i.e., growth) and discontinuous (i.e., disturbance) changes. Change detection techniques that use optical remotely sensed data to capture disturbance related changes are established and commonly applied; however, approaches for the capture of continuous forest changes are less mature. Optical remotely sensed imagery is well suited for capturing horizontally distributed conditions, structures, and changes, while Light Detection And Ranging (LIDAR) data are more appropriate for capturing vertically distributed elements of forest structure and change. The integration of optical remotely sensed imagery and LIDAR data provides improved opportunities to fully characterize forest canopy attributes and dynamics. The study described in this paper captures forest conditions along a corridor approximately 600 km long through the boreal forest of Canada. Two coincident LIDAR transects, representing 1997 and 2002 forest conditions respectively, are compared using image segments generated from Landsat ETM+ imagery. The image segments are used to provide a spatial framework within which the attributes and temporal dynamics of the forest canopy are estimated and compared. Segmented and classified Landsat imagery provides a context for the comparison of sufficiently spatially related LIDAR profiles and for the provision of categories to aid in the application of empirical models requiring knowledge of land cover. Global and local approaches were employed for characterizing changes in forest attributes over time. The global approach, emphasized the overall trend in forest change along the length of the entire transect, and indicated that key canopy attributes were stable, and transect characteristics, including forest canopy height, did not change significantly over the five-year period of this study (two sample t-test, p =0.08). The local approach analyzed segment-based changes in canopy attributes, providing spatially explicit indications of forest growth and depletion. The local approach identified that 84% of the Landsat segments intercepted by both LIDAR transects either have no change, or have a small average increase in canopy height (0.7 m), while the other 16% of segments have an average decrease in canopy height of 1.6 m. As expected, the difference in the magnitude of the changes was markedly greater for depletions than it was for growth, but was less spatially extensive. Growth tends to occur incrementally over broad areas; whereas, depletions are dramatic and spatially constrained. The approach presented holds potential for investigating the impacts of climate change across a latitudinal gradient of boreal forest. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Sustaining sustained yield: class, politics, and post-war forest regulation in British Columbia.
- Author
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Prudham, Scott
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE development , *FOREST management , *LANDSCAPE protection , *FOREST policy , *FORESTS & forestry , *POLITICAL ecology , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
In British Columbia, Canada, industrial sustained-yield forest regulation was embraced together with a system of forest tenures governing private access to public forest lands in the mid-1940s. This approach has underpinned forest exploitation and regulation ever since, despite sometimes significant reforms over the years. Yet this approach to forest policy has also come under fire in recent years because of pervasive signs of economic, social, and environmental exhaustion. In this paper I analyze the political circumstances surrounding adoption of this particular approach to governing forest access and forest use in the province of British Columbia. In particular, I draw on historical documentation related to two key provincial Royal Commissions on Forestry conducted in the 1940s and 1950s. These commissions provided an arena for debating alternative approaches to forest regulation in the province, and resulted in a series of recommendations that were key influences on postwar forest policy. Drawing on the debate and particularly on the positions adopted by socialists and trade unionists, I link the politics of forest regulation to the politics of class struggle and class compromise in early postwar British Columbia. This serves the purpose of highlighting important, alternative ideas about forest use values and exchange values that contrast with those that underpin conventional, commodity-oriented forestry in the province, as well as with contemporary alternatives to mainstream forestry. It also serves the purpose of exploring the organization of political consent around industrial, sustained-yield forestry, treating this model of regulation not as something ‘natural’, but rather as something politically contingent and negotiated. And finally, I examine seldom explored links between the politics of producing and regulating nature, and the politics of class struggle under capitalism more generally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Design of an environmental monitoring program using NDVI and cumulative effects assessment.
- Author
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Quiñonez‐Piñón, R., Mendoza‐Durán, A., and Valeo, C.
- Subjects
- *
VEGETATION & climate , *FORESTS & forestry , *HABITATS , *ANIMALS , *SOIL moisture , *RIVERS - Abstract
This paper presents a sampling design for monitoring spatial and temporal changes in forest health in the Upper Elbow River Basin, in Alberta, Canada. The procedure involved a combination of cumulative effects assessment and remote sensing techniques for selecting sampling sites based on physical and anthropogenic features. Normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) was the indicator of forest health. Unique combinations of slope, aspect, soil moisture, NDVI, vegetation type, and the zone of influence of human activities were used to select pairs of sampling sites. Each pair consisted of a site within the zone of influence and one outside the zone. Spatial discrimination analysis was the method used for reclassification. The analysis suggested that 58 pairs would be appropriate for monitoring. NVDI was negatively correlated with dry soils and increased with the slope. To various extents, most of the species displayed NDVI values between 0.20 and 0.59. The density of linear disturbances (km/km2) was estimated and it showed that one of the three sub-catchments, the Bragg Creek, has levels of human disturbance above the value considered optimal for wildlife habitat suitability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Native involvement in strategic assessment of natural resource development: the example of the Crees living in the Canadian taiga.
- Author
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Lajoie, Ginette and Bouchard, Michel A.
- Subjects
- *
AGRICULTURE , *FORESTS & forestry , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *TAIGAS , *MINERAL industries - Abstract
The James Bay Agreement reinforces the rights of the Crees to 500,000 km² of territory in the boreal forest and taiga of northern Quebec. In it, consultation and environmental assessment (EA) mechanisms were set up to ensure the Crees' direct involvement in environmental decisions. This paper addresses three matters: the influence of Native involvement in the EA process; updating the EA process under the Agreement to in-corporate the apparently new tools of strategic environmental assessments (SEAs); and adaptation of the concept of SEA to the Native context. Our analysis focuses on the experience gained from large hydroelectric development projects, recent and planned mining developments, and forestry operations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. De-centering environmental governance: A short history and analysis of democratic processes in the forest sector of Alberta, Canada.
- Author
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Parkins, John R.
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry , *CULTURAL pluralism , *DECISION making , *MANAGEMENT , *CORPORATIONS - Abstract
This paper describes the emergence of a de-centered and privatized mode of governance in the Canadian forest sector. Using deliberative democratic theory as a descriptive foundation, it explores two key social facts that are arguably central to any historical analysis of this trend. First, increasing cultural pluralism challenges contemporary society to create new institutional arrangements that can incorporate a much larger, and often contested, array of public values into decision-making processes. Second, as management systems become more complex and science-driven, decision makers are finding it increasingly difficult to resolve issues of uncertainty and conflicting scientific evidence. De-centered forms of public participation provide important opportunities for government and industry to overcome these contemporary challenges, but certain side effects are also apparent. From the steering tactics of sponsoring agencies and corporations to the “ghettoizing” of environmental discourses, several implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Fire Interval Effects on Successional Trajectory in Boreal Forests of Northwest Canada.
- Author
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Johnstone, J. F. and Chapin, F. S.
- Subjects
- *
ECOLOGICAL succession , *TAIGAS , *FORESTS & forestry , *POPULUS tremuloides , *VEGETATION dynamics , *SPRUCE , *PINE , *PLANT canopies - Abstract
Although succession may follow multiple pathways in a given environment, the causes of such variation are often elusive. This paper describes how changes in fire interval mediate successional trajectory in conifer-dominated boreal forests of northwestern Canada. Tree densities were measured 5 and 19 years after fire in permanent plots and related to pre-fire vegetation, site and fire characteristics. In stands that were greater than 75 years of age when they burned, recruitment density of conifers was significantly correlated with pre-fire species basal area, supporting the expectation of stand self-replacement as the most common successional pathway in these forests. In contrast, stands that were under 25 years of age at the time of burning had significantly reduced conifer recruitment, but showed no change in recruitment of trembling aspen ( Populus tremuloides). As a result, young-burned stands had a much higher probability of regenerating to deciduous dominance than mature-burned stands, despite the dominance of both groups by spruce ( Picea mariana and Picea glauca) and pine ( Pinus contorta) before the fire. Once initiated, deciduous-dominated stands may be maintained across subsequent fire cycles through mechanisms such as low on-site availability of conifer seed, competition with the aspen canopy, and rapid asexual regeneration of aspen after fire. We suggest that climate-related increases in fire frequency could trigger more frequent shifts from conifer to deciduous-dominated successional trajectories in the future, with consequent effects on multiple ecosystem processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Mapping stand-level forest biophysical variables for a mixedwood boreal forest using lidar: an examination of scanning density.
- Author
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Thomas, V., Treitz, P., McCaughey, J.H., and Morrison, I.
- Subjects
- *
OPTICAL radar , *FOREST management , *LANDSCAPE protection , *FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Light detection and ranging (lidar) is becoming an increasingly popular technology among scientists for the development of predictive models of forest biophysical variables. However, before this technology can be adopted with confidence for long-term monitoring applications in Canada, robust models must be developed that can be applied and validated over large and complex forested areas. This will require "scaling-up" from current models developed from high-density lidar data to low-density data collected at higher altitudes. This paper investigates the effect of lowering the average point spacing of discrete lidar returns on models of forest biophysical variables. Validation of results revealed that high-density models are well correlated with mean dominant height, basal area, crown closure, and average aboveground biomass (R2 = 0.84, 0.89, 0.60, and 0.91, respectively). Low-density models could not accurately predict crown closure (R2 = 0.36). However, they did provide slightly improved estimates for mean dominant height, basal area, and average aboveground biomass (R2 = 0.90, 0.91, and 0.92, respectively). Maps were generated and validated for the entire study area from the low-density models. The ability of low-density models to accurately map key biophysical variables is a positive indicator for the utility of lidar data for monitoring large forested areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. SCS+C: A Modified Sun-Canopy-Sensor Topographic Correction in Forested Terrain.
- Author
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Soenen, Scott A., Peddle, Derek R., and Coburn, Craig A.
- Subjects
- *
REMOTE sensing , *FORESTS & forestry , *REFLECTANCE , *CARTOGRAPHY , *RELIEF models , *OPTICAL reflection - Abstract
Topographic correction based on sun-canopy-sensor (SCS) geometry is more appropriate than terrain-based corrections in forested areas since SCS preserves the geotropic nature of trees (vertical growth) regardless of terrain, view, and illumination angles. However, in some terrain orientations, SCS experiences an overcorrection problem similar to other simple photometric functions. To address this problem, we propose a new SCS+C correction that accounts for diffuse atmospheric irradiance based on the C-correction. A rigorous, comprehensive, and flexible method for independent validation based on canopy geometric optical reflectance models is also introduced as an improvement over previous validation approaches, and forms a secondary contribution of this paper. Results for a full range of slopes, aspects, and crown closures showed SCS+C provided improved corrections compared to the SCS and four other photometric approaches (cosine, C, Minnaert, statistical-empirical) for a Rocky Mountain forest setting in western Canada. It was concluded that SCS+C should be considered for topographic correction of remote sensing imagery in forested terrain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. A method for detecting large-scale forest cover change using coarse spatial resolution imagery
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Fraser, R.H., Abuelgasim, A., and Latifovic, R.
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry , *VEGETATION boundaries , *REMOTE sensing - Abstract
Abstract: Many large countries, including Canada, rely on earth observation as a practical and cost-effective means of monitoring their vast inland ecosystems. A potentially efficient approach is one that detects vegetation changes over a hierarchy of spatial scales ranging from coarse to fine. This paper presents a Change Screening Analysis Technique (Change-SAT) designed as a coarse filter to identify the location and timing of large (>5–10 km2) forest cover changes caused by anthropogenic and natural disturbances at an annual, continental scale. The method uses change metrics derived from 1-km multi-temporal SPOT VEGETATION and NOAA AVHRR imagery (reflectance, temperature, and texture information) and ancillary spatial variables (proximity to active fires, roads, and forest tenures) in combination with logistic regression and decision tree classifiers. Major forest changes of interest include wildfires, insect defoliation, forest harvesting, and flooding. Change-SAT was tested for 1998–2000 using an independent sample of change and no-change sites over Canada. Overall accuracy was 94% and commission error, especially critical for large-area change applications, was less than 1%. Regions identified as having major or widespread changes could be targeted for more detailed investigation and mapping using field visits, aerial survey, or fine resolution EO methods, such as those being applied under Canadian monitoring programs. This multi-resolution approach could be used as part of a forest monitoring system to report on carbon stocks and forest stewardship. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Forest dependence and community well-being in rural Canada: variation by forest sector and region.
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Stedman, Richard C., Parkins, John R., and Beckley, Thomas M.
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- *
FOREST products , *FORESTS & forestry , *ECONOMIC development , *RURAL geography - Abstract
The forest products sector is a major employer in much of rural Canada, and it is often assumed by policy makers that increased timber harvest is a viable means of rural economic development. Despite burgeoning research in the United States, relatively little attention has focused on the relationship between forest dependence and well-being in rural Canada. Especially lacking are macrocomparisons of regions and of forest sectors. This note presents an overview of the relationship between forest dependence and well-being in Canada. Analysis of 1996 Statistics Canada data revealed a great deal of variation in the effect of forest dependence on indicators of well-being (e.g., human capital, unemployment, income): some sectors had fairly positive outcomes (e.g., pulp and paper); others had more negative outcomes (e.g., logging). These relationships, however, vary a great deal by region, suggesting the need for more mid-range explanatory models that incorporate the particulars of place and sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The nature of protest: constructing the spaces of British Columbia's rainforests.
- Author
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Rossiter, David
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTALISM , *LOGGING , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *FORESTS & forestry , *REGIONALISM - Abstract
This paper examines the representations of nature circulating in a Greenpeace anti-logging campaign in British Columbia, Canada. The effort to stop industrial logging in a region of the central coast named 'the Great Bear Rainforest' is presented as a case study through which nature's social production can be glimpsed. Part of the larger 'war in the woods' that gripped British Columbia throughout the 1990s, the campaign considered here pitted Greenpeace and other environmental non-governmental organizations and their grassroots supporters against the forestry industry and many members of resource-producing communities. Through an analysis of campaign literature, newspaper coverage and 'letters to the editor', it is argued that the preservationist position advanced by Greenpeace visually and discursively constructs a concept of pristine nature which appeals to urban populations, employs a neocolonial representation of First Nations peoples and the nature within which they are situated, and finds authority and legitimacy in ecosystem discourse. Drawing both on work by Matthew Sparke concerning mapping and the narration of the nation and on Haripriya Rangan's identification of regionality as a key concept in understanding nature's production, it is suggested that the construction of nature considered in this case study needs to be understood as part of an articulation of a particular west coast metropolitan identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The U.S.-Canada Softwood Lumber Dispute and the WTO Definition of Subsidy.
- Author
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Gagné, Gilbert and Roch, François
- Subjects
- *
FOREST policy , *SUBSIDIES , *INTERNATIONAL trade , *PUBLIC lands , *FORESTS & forestry , *INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
This paper proposal concentrates on the role of the multilateral trading regime in the dispute over the Canadian exports of softwood lumber to the United States. This conflict has been one of the most serious and complex in world trade as it involves key issues about what constitutes a subsidy. The United States argues that Canadian forest policies, including the fees charged by Canada's provincial governments to private firms to harvest trees on public lands, result in subsidization, as such policies would not conform with market principles. For its part, Canada insists that its forestry practices represent general public policies that cannot be equated with subsidies and unfair conditions of competition.Within the past 20 years, a number of U.S. trade provisions have been developed in response to the Softwood Lumber case, notably through an expansion of the notion of countervailable subsidy. At the multilateral level, efforts by states, especially those of the Canadian government, have been directed at preventing or limiting the expansion of countervailable subsidies. As the regime governing international trade, the World Trade Organization is the forum where such issues are discussed and negotiated upon. Canada and most states have held that the concept of subsidy should be defined as a "government financial contribution" that confers a "benefit" on firms, a position reflected in the definition that resulted from the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations that concluded in 1993. However, the United States continues to seek a more expansive definition with "any government action or combination of government actions which confers a benefit on the recipient firm(s)". In view of its importance and the central issues it raises, the Softwood Lumber conflict has stood at the forefront of the development of international trade rules and case law as they pertain to subsidies and trade remedies.On the basis of the Softwood Lumber case, the paper proposes to identify and assess 1) the evolution of the multilateral negotiations on subsidies and countervailing measures; 2) the development of the multilateral provisions relating to subsidies, particularly to the definition of the notion of subsidy; 3) the successive rulings on the subsidy provisions (the case law); and 4) the evolution of U.S. trade remedy legislation, regulations, and practices, as well as of the U.S. implementation of multilateral provisions and rulings. The evolution of such issues will be revealing of the degree of state policy diversity that can be accommodated with the imperatives of economic globalization. ..PAT.-Conference Proceeding [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
49. Relief for Canada's forests.
- Author
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Pharis, Vivian
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Discusses North America's declining role in world pulp and paper markets. Role of consumers' environmental knowledge in deciding how much and what kind of pulp products are acceptable to the public; Cutting of Canada's boreal forests; Declines in world pulp prices and production; Plantation forestry in Canada.
- Published
- 1993
50. Cut down by red ink.
- Author
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McMurdy, D. and Dale, D.
- Subjects
- *
FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Examines the reasons for the current downturn in Canada's forest products industry. Threat to Canada's economy; Plans to shut down the Spruce Falls Paper and Power Co. in Kapuskasing, Ont.; Downturn in Quebec, Ont., the Atlantic provinces, and British Columbia; Spending cuts and environmental standards; De-inking plants; Newsprint maker, Abitibi-Price Inc. of Toronto; Noranda Forest Inc. of Toronto; More.
- Published
- 1991
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