OLD-GROWTH FORESTS INVENTORY FOR BRITISH-COLUMBIA, CANADA

Citation
A. Mackinnon et T. Vold, OLD-GROWTH FORESTS INVENTORY FOR BRITISH-COLUMBIA, CANADA, Natural areas journal, 18(4), 1998, pp. 309-318
Citations number
37
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology,Forestry,Biology
Journal title
ISSN journal
08858608
Volume
18
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
309 - 318
Database
ISI
SICI code
0885-8608(1998)18:4<309:OFIFBC>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
We analyzed more than 7,000 1:20,000-scale forest cover maps for Briti sh Columbia to determine the amount of old-growth forest in the Canadi an province. For this exercise, ''old growth'' was defined as: forests on the coast > 250 years old; and forests in the interior > 140 years old for most tree species, and > 120 years old for lodgepole pine and deciduous species. Using this definition, British Columbia is 37.1% n onforest, 36.1% younger forest, and 26.8% old growth. These data were analyzed by broad ecological (biogeoclimatic) zones. Old-growth forest s cover more than 40% of the land base on the coast and at subalpine e levations in interior British Columbia, and less than 1% of the land b ase in the coastal rainshadow forests of southeastern Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands. Approximately 7.7% of the province's land base is covered with forests > 250 years old. Almost 13% of British Columbi a's remaining old growth is in protected areas. In the future, at ea o f old-growth forest will decrease on the province's timber-harvest lan d base; this decrease may be somewhat offset by increases (due to fire suppression) outside of the timber-harvest land base.