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Dry Forest Understory
Dry Forest Understory |
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Dry forests of ponderosa pine
(Pinus ponderosa) and interior Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga
menziesii var glauca) occur along the valleys at low-to-mid
elevations within the southern interior of British Columbia.
Fire suppression, overgrazing, and
selective logging in these forests are believed to have caused forest
encroachment on grasslands and ingrowth within open forests.
Encroachment is tree ingrowth in previously treeless openings. Ingrowth
is excessive tree recruitment, primarily by shade-tolerant species, such
as interior Douglas-fir, within low-density, open forests
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Forest cover changes over a 40 year period near Premier Lake, BC provide an example of forest encroachment onto grasslands.
The photo on the left (below) shows forest cover
in 1954 and the photo on the right shows forest cover in
1994. It has been estimated that 1500 to 3000 ha of open
forest and grassland are lost annually to ingrowth and
encroachment in the East Kootenay region of BC.
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Restoration of ingrown stands usually begins with a harvest pass to remove merchantable timber and reduce overstory stocking to between 76 and 400 stems per ha. Slashing is used to eliminate excess intermediate layer trees that cannot be safely removed in a prescribed fire.
In the East Kootenay region of BC, restoration prescriptions are based on land use guidelines set by the Kootenay-Boundary Land Use Plan. The Rocky Mountain Trench Restoration Program estimates that 135 000 ha of ingrown forest will be restored to grassland or open forest by the year 2030.
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Last Modified: 2006 Sep 7. Ministry contact: Reg Newman. Webmaster: For.Prodres@gov.bc.ca |