Caribou Conservation: Restoring Trees on Seismic Lines in Alberta, Canada

Seismic lines are narrow linear (~3–8 m wide) forest clearings that are used for petroleum exploration in Alberta’s boreal forest. Many seismic lines have experienced poor tree regeneration since initial disturbance, with most failures occurring in treed peatlands that are used by the threatened woo...

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Published in:Forests
Main Authors: Angelo T. Filicetti, Michael Cody, Scott E. Nielsen
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/f10020185
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author Angelo T. Filicetti
Michael Cody
Scott E. Nielsen
author_facet Angelo T. Filicetti
Michael Cody
Scott E. Nielsen
author_sort Angelo T. Filicetti
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 2
container_start_page 185
container_title Forests
container_volume 10
description Seismic lines are narrow linear (~3–8 m wide) forest clearings that are used for petroleum exploration in Alberta’s boreal forest. Many seismic lines have experienced poor tree regeneration since initial disturbance, with most failures occurring in treed peatlands that are used by the threatened woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou). Extensive networks of seismic lines, which often reach densities of 40 km/km2, are thought to have contributed to declines in caribou. The reforestation of seismic lines is therefore a focus of conservation. Methods to reforest seismic lines are expensive (averaging $12,500 per km) with uncertainty of which seismic lines need which treatments, if any, resulting in inefficiencies in restoration actions. Here, we monitored the effectiveness of treatments on seismic lines as compared to untreated seismic lines and adjacent undisturbed reference stands for treed peatlands in northeast Alberta, Canada. Mechanical site preparation (mounding and ripping) increased tree density when compared to untreated lines, despite averaging 3.8-years since treatment (vs. 22 years since disturbance for untreated). Specifically, treated lines had, on average, 12,290 regenerating tree stems/ha, which is 1.6-times more than untreated lines (7680 stems/ha) and 1.5-times more than the adjacent undisturbed forest (8240 stems/ha). Using only mechanical site preparation, treated seismic lines consistently have more regenerating trees across all four ecosites, although the higher amounts of stems that were observed on treated poor fens are not significant when compared to untreated or adjacent undisturbed reference stands.
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/1999-4907/10/2/185/ 2025-01-17T00:26:06+00:00 Caribou Conservation: Restoring Trees on Seismic Lines in Alberta, Canada Angelo T. Filicetti Michael Cody Scott E. Nielsen agris 2019-02-20 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/f10020185 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Forest Ecology and Management https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/f10020185 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Forests; Volume 10; Issue 2; Pages: 185 tamarack black spruce seismic line forest gap boreal forest woodland caribou forest regeneration silviculture mechanical site preparation Text 2019 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/f10020185 2023-07-31T22:03:33Z Seismic lines are narrow linear (~3–8 m wide) forest clearings that are used for petroleum exploration in Alberta’s boreal forest. Many seismic lines have experienced poor tree regeneration since initial disturbance, with most failures occurring in treed peatlands that are used by the threatened woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou). Extensive networks of seismic lines, which often reach densities of 40 km/km2, are thought to have contributed to declines in caribou. The reforestation of seismic lines is therefore a focus of conservation. Methods to reforest seismic lines are expensive (averaging $12,500 per km) with uncertainty of which seismic lines need which treatments, if any, resulting in inefficiencies in restoration actions. Here, we monitored the effectiveness of treatments on seismic lines as compared to untreated seismic lines and adjacent undisturbed reference stands for treed peatlands in northeast Alberta, Canada. Mechanical site preparation (mounding and ripping) increased tree density when compared to untreated lines, despite averaging 3.8-years since treatment (vs. 22 years since disturbance for untreated). Specifically, treated lines had, on average, 12,290 regenerating tree stems/ha, which is 1.6-times more than untreated lines (7680 stems/ha) and 1.5-times more than the adjacent undisturbed forest (8240 stems/ha). Using only mechanical site preparation, treated seismic lines consistently have more regenerating trees across all four ecosites, although the higher amounts of stems that were observed on treated poor fens are not significant when compared to untreated or adjacent undisturbed reference stands. Text Rangifer tarandus MDPI Open Access Publishing Canada Tamarack ENVELOPE(-121.170,-121.170,57.650,57.650) Forests 10 2 185
spellingShingle tamarack
black spruce
seismic line
forest gap
boreal forest
woodland caribou
forest regeneration
silviculture
mechanical site preparation
Angelo T. Filicetti
Michael Cody
Scott E. Nielsen
Caribou Conservation: Restoring Trees on Seismic Lines in Alberta, Canada
title Caribou Conservation: Restoring Trees on Seismic Lines in Alberta, Canada
title_full Caribou Conservation: Restoring Trees on Seismic Lines in Alberta, Canada
title_fullStr Caribou Conservation: Restoring Trees on Seismic Lines in Alberta, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Caribou Conservation: Restoring Trees on Seismic Lines in Alberta, Canada
title_short Caribou Conservation: Restoring Trees on Seismic Lines in Alberta, Canada
title_sort caribou conservation: restoring trees on seismic lines in alberta, canada
topic tamarack
black spruce
seismic line
forest gap
boreal forest
woodland caribou
forest regeneration
silviculture
mechanical site preparation
topic_facet tamarack
black spruce
seismic line
forest gap
boreal forest
woodland caribou
forest regeneration
silviculture
mechanical site preparation
url https://doi.org/10.3390/f10020185