Search
Skip to Search Results- 5Gauthier, Sylvie
- 5Kneeshaw, Dan
- 4Bergeron, Yves
- 4Flannigan, M.D.
- 4Messier, Christian
- 4Vertinsky, Ilan
- 36Sustainable Forest Management Network
- 25Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 25Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 16Renewable Resources, Department of
- 14Sustainable Forest Management Network/Research Papers (Sustainable Forest Management Network)
- 12Sustainable Forest Management Network/Project Reports (Sustainable Forest Management Network)
-
Interim report on symptomology and threshold levels of air pollutant injury to vegetation, 1978-79
Download1979
Malhotra, S. S., Addison, P. A.
The dominant woody boreal forest plant species were fumigated with 0.34 ppm SO2 under controlled conditions in the laboratory in order to rank their physiological and visual sensitivities to the air pollutant. Deciduous trees and shrubs were much more sensitive than conifers, presumably because...
-
Interim report on symptomology and threshold levels of air pollutant injury to vegetation, 1975 to 1978
Download1979
Malhotra, S. S., Addison, P. A.
Six boreal forest plant species were fumigated in a newly developed environmental growth chamber with SO2 control capability,for up to 40 days at 0.34 ppm SO2. All species showed a gradual decline in CO2 gas exchange which was related to symptom development characteristic of SO2 toxicity. Paper...
-
1980
A study of small mammal populations (small rodents and snowshoe hares), habitat use, small rodent diets, and small mammal damage in natural forest and successional communities was begun in June 1978 and continued until November 1979. Based on population sizes and distributions, four species of...
-
Habitat and forage selection of moose in the aspen-dominated boreal forest, central Alberta
Download1992
Forage and habitat selection of tame moose (Alces alces) in a 65 ha enclosure were studied for an annual cycle. Although the staple winter foods were woody twigs, moose consumed large amounts of leaf litter and bark under some environmental conditions. Foliage dominated the diet following leaf...
-
Welfare Implications of the Allowable Cut Effect in the Context of Sustain Yield and Sustainable Development Forestry
Download1996
In 1972, Schweitzer et al. defined the allowable cut effect (ACE) as an \"...immediate increase in today's allowable cut which is attributable to expected future increases in (timber) yields.\" Having made this observation, the authors requested feedback on how the ACE should be considered in...
-