The operational forestry practices employed by Millar Western Forest Products Ltd. in the Upper and Lower Foothills of Alberta, Canada integrate a broad range of tools to plan, implement, and manage post-harvest site regeneration of pure and mixedwood boreal forests. Following tree harvesting, mechanical site preparation is often used to improve microsite conditions to promote conifer seedling establishment or natural regeneration. Chemical and mechanical site preparation and stand tending control competing vascular weed species. To meet forest regeneration commitments, incorporating knowledge gained from forestry experimentation, long-term field data and iterative deterministic modelling into modified management approaches is employed to formulate appropriate vegetation management strategies. These strategies consider and balance multiple biodiversity (e.g., habitat supply modelling), physical environmental (e.g., streamflow), and societal (e.g., industrial fibre requirements) needs relative to a regenerated vegetation complex. From this experience and understanding, the Company developed a series of generic establishment regimes (GERs), which prescribe detailed silvicultural activities to achieve site-regenerated vegetation complexes in alignment with higher-level forest management planning. An outcome of the GER formulation was the development of corresponding plant community assembly diagrams (PCADs), which describe vegetation complexity and permit calculation of total biomass relative to the time series of silvicultural activities within each GER. In turn, these allow forest planners to model biological, physical, and societal factors, while taking into consideration specific stand growth trajectories based on impacts of silvicultural activities on vegetation biomass and species composition. The GERs and PCADs help formulate vegetation complexes over time and are used to guide the behaviour of a vegetation growth model used in conjunction with a hydrologic simulation model.
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August 2008
Research Article|
March 26 2009
Development of opinion-based generic reforestation regimes and their application in vegetation management and water modelling in the Upper and Lower Foothills of Alberta Available to Purchase
Paul Godin;
Paul Godin
aMillar Western Forest Products Ltd, Edmonton, AB T5M 2S5, Canada.
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Jonathan S. Russell;
Jonathan S. Russell
aMillar Western Forest Products Ltd, Edmonton, AB T5M 2S5, Canada.
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J. Douglas MacDonald;
bFaculty of Forestry and the Forest Environment, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1, Canada.
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Gordon Putz;
Gordon Putz
cDepartment of Civil and Geological Engineering, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5A9, Canada.
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Ellie E. Prepas
bFaculty of Forestry and the Forest Environment, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, ON P7B 5E1, Canada.
dDepartment of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E9, Canada.
Corresponding author (email: eprepas@lakeheadu.ca)
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Corresponding author (email: eprepas@lakeheadu.ca)
*
Present address: Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada/Agriculture et Agroalimentaire Canada, 2560 Boul Hochelaga, Quebec, QC G1V 2J3, Canada.
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
June 27 2008
Accepted:
January 07 2009
Accepted:
January 07 2009
Online ISSN: 1496-256X
Print ISSN: 1496-2551
2009
Journal of Environmental Engineering and Science (2008) 7 (Supplement 1): 23–33.
Article history
Received:
June 27 2008
Accepted:
January 07 2009
Accepted:
January 07 2009
Citation
Godin P, Russell JS, MacDonald JD, Putz G, Prepas EE (2008), "Development of opinion-based generic reforestation regimes and their application in vegetation management and water modelling in the Upper and Lower Foothills of Alberta". Journal of Environmental Engineering and Science, Vol. 7 No. Supplement 1 pp. 23–33, doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/S09-001
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