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Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

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Natural Challenges in Riparian Zones of Alberta’s Foothills Kris McCleary and Dave Andison Bandaloop Landscape-Ecosystem Services
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Page 1: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Natural Challenges in Riparian

Zones of Alberta’s Foothills

Kris McCleary and Dave Andison

Bandaloop Landscape-Ecosystem

Services

Page 2: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Practical Question:

How could riparian zones be managed

to better approximate natural

patterns?

Scientific Questions:

1. Do fires differentially affect riparian

zones?

2. Do riparian zones pose unique

emulation issues?

Page 3: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Transect 6, Little Berland River

Tree DBH Along Transect

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

0 150 300 450 600 750 900

Distance Along Transect (m)

Tre

e D

BH

(cm

)

Upland

Riparian

Page 4: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills
Page 5: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills
Page 6: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills
Page 7: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

ÿ

Page 8: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

10% of samples showed obvious

evidence that the last fire stopped

at the riparian zone.

Transect 6, Little Berland River

Tree Age Along Transect

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

0 200 400 600 800 1000

Distance Along Transect (m)

Tree

Age

Upland Riparian Transition

Page 9: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Transect 6, Little Berland River

Tree Age Along Transect

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

0 200 400 600 800 1000

Distance Along Transect (m)

Tre

e A

ge

Upland Riparian Transition

Page 10: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Transect 1, Emerson Creek

Tree Age Along Transect

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

0 100 200 300 400 500

Distance Along Transect (m)

Tre

e A

ge

Upland

Riparian

Page 11: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Transect 23, Tributary of Embarras River

Tree Age Along Transect

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 50 100 150 200 250 300

Distance Along Transect (m)

Tre

e A

ge

Upland

Riparian

Page 12: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

16% of samples had higher than normal

veteran density in riparian zones.

Riparian zones with veterans tended to be:

- Spruce-dominated

- Across lower-order streams.

- Within very steep profiles, with

wide riparian zones.

Page 13: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Transect 20, Antler Creek

Tree Age Along Transect

0

50

100

150

200

250

0 50 100 150 200 250

Distance Along Transect (m)

Tre

e A

ge

Upland

Riparian

Page 14: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

27% of samples had higher than normal

levels of ingress within riparian zones.

Riparian zones with ingress tended to be:

- Pine-dominated.

- Evenly distributed across all stream

orders, all riparian zone widths.

- Evenly distributed across terrain

types.

Page 15: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Transect 31, Tributary of Lovett River

Tree Age Along Transect

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 100 200 300

Distance Along Transect (m)

Tre

e A

ge

Upland

Riparian

Page 16: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Transect 19, Tributary to Gregg River

Tree Age Along Transect

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

0 50 100 150 200 250 300

Distance Along Transect (m)

Tre

e A

ge

Upland

Riparian

Page 17: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Transect 3, Tributary of Beaver Creek

Tree Age Along Transect

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 100 200 300 400 500 600

Distance Along Transect (m)

Tre

e A

ge

Upland

Riparian

Transition

Page 18: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Scientific Question #1: Do fires differentially affect

riparian zones?

Not often. There is good evidence to suggest that

the presence of fire in riparian zones is almost as

widespread as on the upland portion of the

landscape.

This is consistent with the a landscape-level

analysis which demonstrates the larger-scale

problems of saving all riparian zones:

- linear old growth zones with no interior

- potential fire, disease, insect magnets

- fragmentation

Page 19: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Linear, Permanent Riparian Zones:

= No interior old forest

= Pre-determined patch sizes, shapes

= Natural disturbance problems

= Riparian zone ingress

= Concentrates old growth “types”

Page 20: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

“Natural” Riparian Zones:

= Selective fire “skips”

= Maintains unique vegetation structures

= Dynamic old forest patches

= Dynamic patch sizes and shapes

Page 21: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

No Restrictions - Run #1

Summary of

Disturbance

700 ha Forest

187 ha Non-F.

5.9 km. Ripar.

113 m/ha Edge

Page 22: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

No Restrictions - Run #4

Summary of

Disturbance

700 ha Forest

108 ha Non-F.

4.1 km. Ripar.

111 m/ha Edge

Page 23: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

No Creek Crossing - Run #2

Summary of

Disturbance

700 ha Forest

74 ha Non-F.

0 km. Ripar.

71 m/ha Edge

Page 24: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18

10-year Time-steps

Proportion

of "Old"

Spruce

LFS Two-pass

Weldwood One-pass

NRV

Why?

….. riparian protection.

The proportion of “old” spruce-dominated stands will begin

to move well beyond NRV under current guidelines.

Page 25: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

HOWEVER:

Scientific Question #2: Do riparian zones

pose unique emulation issues?

Yes. The NRV model tells us that there is no

natural equivalent to machinery PSI, skid

trails, and removing / redistributing biomass.

Page 26: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Pros

- Veteran control

- Ingress control

- Lower natural

disturbance hazard?

- No fragmentation

- Better landscape

distribution of old-

growth

Cons

- Compaction

- Erosion

- Overland flow

- Stream sedimentation,

temperature…?

Disturbing Riparian Zones:

The Dilemma

Page 27: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Seek alternatives

- winter cut

- technological innovation

- burn

- experiment / adapt / push the limits

Leave the door open – things will surely change.

What To Do?

Page 28: Hlp 2000 10 prsnttn cifnaturalchallengesinriparianzonesofabsfoothills

Admit that we don’t have all of the answers yet.

Summarize what we know about the science.

- pros and cons, recognize limits of NRV

What other factors come into play?

- aesthetics

- cultural / social values

- economics

- logging risk

Tackle the key questions that remain

- risk assessment

- stream / aquatic dynamics

What To Do?


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