Criteria and indicator (C&I) frameworks are frequently used for assessing sustainable forest management. Despite their suitability to assess performance, less attention is given to translating them into strategic forest management planning processes and practices that are of cross-cultural...
Author(s)
Spies, J.; Devisscher, T.; Bulkan, J.; Tansey, J.; Griess, V. C.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
Biological Conservation, 2019, 230, pp 151-168
This study examines and characterizes the potential impacts of climate change on the lands of the Nisga'a Nation in British Columbia, Canada, and how these impacts might affect traditional forest practices. The study results were integrated with a review of current Nisga'a forest policy. The...
Author(s)
Arias-Bustamante, J. R.; Innes, J. L.
Publisher
Commonwealth Forestry Association, Craven Arms, UK
Citation
International Forestry Review, 2021, 23, 1, pp 1-15
In many regions, forestry practices are shifting to partial harvesting approaches that seek to maintain species and structural diversity in managed forests. We monitored windthrow for 21 years following partial cutting treatments with 0%, 30%, and 60% removal in a large, replicated experiment...
Author(s)
Coates, K. D.; Lilles, E. B.; Dhar, A.; Hall, E. C.
Publisher
NRC Research Press, Ottawa, Canada
Citation
Canadian Journal of Forest Research, 2020, 50, 9, pp 946-952
The role of forest management in mitigating climate change is a central concern for the Canadian province of British Columbia. The successful implementation of forest management activities to achieve climate change mitigation in British Columbia will be strongly influenced by public support or...
Author(s)
St-Laurent, G. P.; Hagerman, S.; Kozak, R.; Hoberg, G.
Publisher
Public Library of Sciences (PLoS), San Francisco, USA
Citation
PLoS ONE, 2018, 13, 4, pp e0195999
The Forest Resources Assessment 2015 is a comprehensive dataset from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), which provides the opportunity to explore some of the emerging topics related to sustainable forest management. This paper assesses how forests in British...
Author(s)
Gilani, H. R.; Innes, J. L.
Publisher
MDPI AG, Basel, Switzerland
Citation
Forests, 2020, 11, 3,
Mapping and valuing of forest recreation is time-consuming and complex, hampering its inclusion in forest management plans and hence the achievement of a fully sustainable forest management. In this study, we explore the potential of crowdsourced social media data in tackling the mapping and...
Author(s)
Lingua, F.; Coops, N. C.; Lafond, V.; Gaston, C.; Griess, V. C.
Publisher
Public Library of Sciences (PLoS), San Francisco, USA
Citation
PLoS ONE, 2022, 17, 8,
Widespread impacts of a warming planet are fuelling climate change mitigation efforts world-wide. Decision makers are turning to forests, the largest terrestrial primary producer, as a nature-based contribution to mitigation efforts. Resource-based economies, however, have yet to include carbon (C) ...
Author(s)
Boisvenue, C.; Paradis, G.; Eddy, I. M. S.; McIntire, E. J. B.; Chubaty, A. M.
Publisher
IOP Publishing Ltd, Bristol, UK
Citation
Environmental Research Letters, 2022, 17, 11,
Forests around the world are experiencing the cumulative effects of rapid social and environmental change. Building resilience in the forestry sector has thus become of major importance in many countries, including Canada. While British Columbia (BC) generates the highest revenue from the forestry...
Author(s)
Devisscher, T.; Spies, J.; Griess, V. C.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
Land Use Policy, 2021, 103,
Recognizing the potential interactions and synergies between adaptation and mitigation in land-use policies in general and forest policies in particular, research on climate change policy has increasingly focused on integrating both objectives simultaneously (hereafter "interaction model")....
Author(s)
St-Laurent, G. P.; Locatelli, B.; Hoberg, G.; Gukova, V.; Hagerman, S.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd, Oxford, UK
Citation
Land Use Policy, 2021, 104,
Increasing concentrations of atmospheric greenhouse gases (GHGs; CO2, CH4, N2O) cause climate change. Depending on the conditions, soils have the potential to store carbon or to be a source of GHGs to the atmosphere. Riparian soils in particular have high potential to store carbon, but also to be...
Author(s)
Silverthorn, T. K.; Richardson, J. S.
Publisher
Springer, New York, USA
Citation
Ecosystems, 2021, 24, 7, pp 1810-1822