Land Management Search Results
Resource
Resource Date:
March
2012
This presentation provides an overview of the technologies and challenges related to data collection, and some techniques that provide good results.
Resource
This presentation gives an overview of how reclamation practices have evolved over the past several decades, and how the science and research has translated into policy and regulation.
Resource
This presentation discusses the keys to successful natural regeneration of serotinous pine, including adaptations, the value of fire and cone droppage, and current research being undertaken.
Resource
This presentation describes the role of trembling aspen in Alberta's boreal forests, and lays out the process of reclamation when aiming for ecosystem resiliency.
Resource
This presentation discusses the TRIA Project and it's use related to mountain pine beetle populations, physiological genomics and risk modeling.
Resource
Resource Date:
February
2017
This presentation discusses explains how climate change and land use changes impact water supply and how we can adapt.
Resource
This presentation talks about understanding the recovery and self-organization of Mountain Pine Beetle (MPB) impacted stands.
Resource
This presentation discusses research done through EMEND regarding biodiversity, and how wet areas mapping and lidar have been used in that research.
Resource
Jason House described the inverse relationship of soil carbon in peat-mineral soil mix and water stress on lodgepole pine growth on reclaimed oilsands tailing sands.
Resource
Resource Date:
March
2013
This presentation outlines the current standards for allowable cuts in Alberta's forests based on the potential increases in flow rates and flow volumes after trees are harvested.
Resource
This presentation describes how coring lake sediments gives us information on fire history, providing data on fire frequency, severity and what actually burned.
Resource
This presentation provides some basic methods for identifying grasses, forbs and wetland species in Alberta.