|
|
|
Fred Bunnell
Crown land is unique to the Commonwealth and better represented in British Columbia than anywhere else in the Commonwealth (95% of the land base). Through tradition and common law, British Columbians have come to define Crown lands as publicly owned land...
ver más
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fred Bunnell,Laurie L. Kremsater
Climate change has introduced major uncertainties into the planning and practice of forestry. We recommend seven broad actions that would help to make our forests more climate resilience: avoiding entrapment, emphasizing the future, adopting a policy of ...
ver más
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fred Bunnell,Laurie L. Kremsater
We combine climate preferences of tree species with probable changes in insect, disease, fire and other abiotic factors to describe probable changes in distribution of tree species in British Columbia. Predictions of what British Columbia?s forests will ...
ver más
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fred L. Bunnell,Laurie L. Kremsater,Ralph W. Wells
The authors summarize the distribution of terrestrial vertebrates of British Columbia across major habitat types and present empirical and projected effects of global weirding within two particularly vulnerable habitats?alpine and wetland. Global weirdin...
ver más
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pierre Vernier,Fred Bunnell
The coarse-filter approach to sustaining biological diversity attempts to maintain all representative ecosystems and wildlife habitats within an ecological region or a management unit. Ideally, the approach uses information that is simple to acquire or r...
ver más
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Isabelle Houde,Susan Leech,Fred L. Bunnell,Toby Spribille,Curtis Björk
The Albert River valley hosts the only old-growth stands of western redcedar in the Invermere Timber Supply Area (TSA). This portion of the Interior Cedar Hemlock moist cool (ICHmk1) biogeoclimatic variant is spatially disjunct from the rest of the ICHmk...
ver más
|
|
|
|