Water Stewardship Information Sources

Citation Bulmer, C et al. 2008. Monitoring the effects of forest practices on soil productivity and hydrologic function. BC Journal of Ecosystems and Management. 9(2): 48-59
Organization FLNRO
URL http://jem.forrex.org/index.php/jem/article/download/396/311
Abstract/Description or Keywords In British Columbia and elsewhere, governments are evaluating the sustainability of forest practices. This
requires the development of sensitive and reliable indicators and their monitoring over time. Conserving
soil productivity and hydrologic function is a key aspect of forest ecosystem sustainability. British
Columbia’s Forest and Range Evaluation Program (frep) has recently developed a protocol describing
indicators and methods for collecting the data necessary to evaluate forest practices. We present five
indicators for describing the status of soils on recently harvested areas in British Columbia, along with a
brief scientific rationale for including them in the evaluation system, and a description of their intended
use for monitoring sustainability. For three of the indicators, we also provide preliminary thresholds to help
in determining whether current forest practices are consistent with the maintenance of soil productivity
and hydrologic function. erosion, sediment, infiltration, runoff, water quality
Information Type article
Regional Watershed Province
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Chuck Bulmer
Contact Email [email protected]