Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 1980
Citation Winkler, R and Boon, S. 2009. A Summary of Research into the effects of Mountain Pine Beetle related stand mortality on snow accumulation and ablation in BC. Proceedings of the 77th Western Snow Conference, Canmore, AB.
Organization FLNRO
URL http://www.westernsnowconference.org/node/755
Abstract/Description or Keywords Extensive mountain pine beetle related forest mortality throughout the Interior of British Columbia raises
concern regarding the effects of stand deterioration on snow accumulation and ablation, and spring runoff. Studies
quantifying post-pine beetle snow accumulation and ablation rates show that, on average, once 50% or more of the
canopy in mature stands has been lost (defined here as grey attack), snow accumulation is only 13% lower than that
in the open compared to a 25% reduction in mature green/red attack. Reductions in snow ablation rate were similar,
on average, in the green/red and grey attack: 38% and 31%, respectively. The average snow duration in both attack
classes is also similar (3-4 d longer than in the open). Differences in snow accumulation and melt are highly
variable between study locations and years, with spatial differences often exceeding those related to stand
condition. Development of best management practice guidance for broad geographic areas is dependent upon
coordinated research efforts at the same scale, as well as consistency in project design, stand description, survey
and data analysis methods. forest disturbance, mountain pine beetle, snow, snow melt
Information Type article
Regional Watershed All
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Rita Winkler
Contact Email [email protected]