| Module 2 — Maintaining Stand Level Biodiversity — continued |
British Columbia Ministry of Forests |
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General biodiversity management considerations
What do you know about these six attributes? Where can you go to find more information about them? Are there others? If so, what are they? |
One of the key underlying assumptions about biodiversity management is that native species and ecological processes are most likely to be maintained if managed forests resemble those forests created by natural disturbances such as fire, wind, insects and disease. In other words, it is assumed that the habitat needs of most species will be provided by:
The biodiversity management recommendations in this course are primarily aimed at managed forests. The recommendations are designed to promote long-term stand level maintenance and recruitment of important structural attributes such as:
It is not possible to maintain all elements of biodioversity in all places, all the time, in large-scale commercial forest operations. However, by maintaining all species within their historic range in perpetuity, we will enable dispersal and recolonization of biodiversity elements across the vast majority of their naturally occurring areas. Given the high degree of ecological variability in our forests and the multiple resource objectives that are often being managed, managers need to be flexible and creative. Forest managers need to consider on a site-specific basis, the most effective way to provide for biodiversity. This major heading is divided into three subheadings:
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Forest edge and interior habitat (patch size)
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Forest edge is the area where one ecosystem type meets another (e.g., where a forest meets a meadow, boundary between a harvested area and old-growth forest, or a gap in the forest canopy).
In addition to environmental impacts, forest edge also produces a biotic effect. Biotic edge effect occurs when plant and animal species associated with open areas and forest edges move into the intact forest.
Forest interior is the area of the forest not influenced by microclimate or biotic edge effect. Some forest stands form an edge where they border natural features, such as a rock outcrop, meadow, or lake, or a human-caused opening such as a cutblock.
Smaller areas of forest are generally dominated by edge, with little or no interior habitat.
In managed forests, generally as opening sizes decrease the proportion of edge increases. In a landscape with many irregularly shaped patches of forest, the amount of interior habitat may be much less than it appears, because the amount of forest that actually functions as edge.
Figure 6 illustrates the relationship between patch shape and the amount of edge and forest interior habitat.
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Forest management practices to manage for edge and interior habitat |
When designing cutblock size, shape and arrangement, consider the habitat needs of local species-some species benefit from edge, others are affected negatively. Forest managers can greatly influence the amount of forest edge, and therefore wildlife habitat, with their planning and activities.
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Natural disturbances can affect relatively small areas such as singletree or affect very large areas such as a landscape by catastrophic wildfires and forest pest outbreaks. When biodiversity/habitat objectives (or other objectives including VQO, hydrology, fuel management, wildlife habitat needs) support larger opening sizes, it may be appropriate. (This will require district manager approval) Where large or contiguous (aggregated) cutblocks occur for these reasons, more emphasis should be placed on stand level retention practices.
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