Forest Management Flashcards

0
Q

Why are policies often developed?

A

To hold decision makers accountable and to standardize interpretations of process or procedures to avoid negative outcomes.

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1
Q

What’s a policy?

A

Principle or rule to guide the implementation of a process, procedure or protocol to achieve rational outcomes and achieve management objectives.

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2
Q

Why would a company implement a policy?

A

So that by following the policy their employees would be working within the law.

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3
Q

What defines policy in BC?

A
Legislation
Regulations
Directives
Guidelines
Procedures and protocols
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4
Q

What is forestry?

A

Forestry is forest resource management. It is all about managing forests for the specific values that the owner (society) wishes to produce, maintain or enhance.

  • Fiber
  • Water
  • Recreation
  • Cultural Values
  • Wildlife habitat
  • Biodiversity
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5
Q

Who has jurisdiction over the lands and natural resources in canada?

A

Provincial and territorial governments

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6
Q
  • Which groups manage forest resources of BC?
A
  • Ministry of forests
  • Ministry of Environment
  • legislated resource tenure holders
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7
Q

How much forest land is in Canada? In BC?

A

Canada: 3,970,000 km2
BC: 550,000 km2 - 60%of BC is forest land.

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8
Q

What laws are in place in private forest lands?

A

The private managed forest land act

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9
Q

How much of BC’s forest lands are private?

A

4 % of total land base (4,000,000 Ha2) or 40,000 km2

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10
Q

What is the UN definition of a forest? What about the scientific definition?

A

UN: Wooded area > 0.5Ha with a minimum of 10% crown cover and trees >5m tall.

Scientific: Forests are communities of living organisms characterized by the presence of trees that have symbiotic relationships with each-other and the physical environment.

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11
Q

What types of forests are there?

A
  • Boreal
  • Temperate
  • Urban
  • Wetland/Riparian
  • Tropical
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12
Q

How much wood does the average canadian consume per day? Per year?

A

4.5 lbs per day, or 1642.5 lbs per year

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13
Q

What is the largest consumer of wood in the world?

A

Fire

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14
Q

What activity contributes to the bulk of wood consumption ion the world?

A

Burning wood as fuel for heating, cooking and industry. Charcoal manufacturing also adds to this, falling under industry.

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15
Q

What period of history contributed most to the decline of woodstocks?

A

The bronze and iron ages brought about industrial processes that were dependant on large amounts of wood in the form of charcoal.

16
Q

Who was John Evelyn?

A

In 1664, john evelyn published a famous book on tree culture for english land owners. The intention was to encourage landowners to plant and care for trees that would eventually be used by the english navy.

17
Q

Who was Heinrich Cotta?

A

Cotta was the founder of the Royal Saxon Academy of Forestry in 1811. He was responsible for developing mathematically based approaches to manage forests. Considered a Pioneer of Modern Forestry who inspired many other foresters to start thinking about sustainability.

18
Q

What are the 3 principal Causes that make forestry so backwards?

A
  • The long time that wood needs for development
  • The great variety of sites on which it grows
  • The fact that the forester who practices much, writes but little and he who writes much, practices forestry but little.
19
Q

What is the forestry team?

A

The ABCFP is referred to as the forestry team, It consists of a wide array of professionals concerned with forest management.

20
Q

What are the critical forest resource management related statutes in BC?

A
  • Forest Act
  • Forest Land and Practices Act
  • The Foresters act
  • The Ministry of Forests Act
  • The Wildfire Act
  • The Range Act
21
Q

Who does the Minister Of Forests report to?

A

The Lieutenant Governor

22
Q

What kind of laws does the Forest Act contain?

A

Administrative Laws that regulate the disposition of crown timber, stumpage determination, Tenure management, Scaling and other administrative processes.

23
Q

What kind of Laws does the forest range and practices act contain?

A

Operational laws surrounding enforcement, forest health, standards of road construction, Gene management, Standards of operations, planning requirements and recreational forest use

24
Q

How much of BC’s crown land contributes to the provincial allowable annual cut?

A

0.0025% gives roughly 80,000,000 m3

25
Q

What are BCs 3 largest markets for wood?

A

40% to USA
33% to China
11% to Japan
16% to Canada/EU/International Market

26
Q

The guiding principle of forest management in BC is to protect and enhance 8 major resource values. What are they?

A
  • Soil
  • Riparian areas, streams and hydrology
  • Timber
  • Forest Health
  • Fisheries Habitat
  • Wildlife habitat and biodiversity
  • Heritage and cultural values
  • Recreation and aesthetics
27
Q

Where does BC get the authority to manage its resource values?

A

The Canadian constitution gives all provincial and territorial Gov’ts the responsibility to manage their own resource values. This includes salt water fish streams but not salt water fisheries.

28
Q

What is “Policy”

A

Policy refers to a deliberate system of principles to guide decisions and achieve rational outcomes. Implemented by the government as a procedure or a protocol.

29
Q

Why are policies developed?

A

To guide the actions of employees with respect to the job they are performing. All government employees must be clear on their responsibilities and the policies surrounding the execution of their responsibilities.

30
Q

hopw many regions and districts on the west coast?

A

2 regions - west coast / sputh coast

7 districts - 4 in west, 3 in south

31
Q

How many regions and districts are in BC?

A

8 regions and 30 districts as of 2012