Conservation of biodiversity in Northern Canada through ecological processes and cultural landscapes

Disturbance processes are critical to ecosystem function and resilience. Across a landscape, fire varies in space and time, which results in a shifting mosaic of patches with different fire return intervals and vertical structure, promoting habitat heterogeneity and biodiversity. The spatiotemporal...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Leverkus, Sonja Eva Ryka
Other Authors: Fuhlendorf, Samuel Dean, Geertsema, Marten, Engle, David M., Elmore, R. Dwayne, Baum, Kristen
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11244/45363
Description
Summary:Disturbance processes are critical to ecosystem function and resilience. Across a landscape, fire varies in space and time, which results in a shifting mosaic of patches with different fire return intervals and vertical structure, promoting habitat heterogeneity and biodiversity. The spatiotemporal distribution of fire across the boreal landscape is critical for many species. The number of fires and number of times a particular area has burned results in differences in vertical structure, species composition and openness. This patchwork mosaic of the Boreal forest has historically been a result of anthropogenic fire and lightning since the last Ice Age. Prescribed fire was traditionally used by First Nations in the region and has been continued by guide outfitters in mountainous portions of the Boreal forest of northeastern British Columbia. In recent years, energy development in the region has resulted in a static mosaic of disturbance in the Boreal forest resulting in a series of linear and non-linear development disturbances. The cultural landscape of open vegetation cover across the Boreal is a result of anthropogenic disturbance (prescribed fire and energy development) and wildfire. We studied nearly one century of fire data (wildfire and prescribed fire) across three scales to determine the fire history of northeastern British Columbia. We found that most north-facing slopes experience infrequent fire while some south-facing slopes in certain watersheds have a higher fire frequency from anthropogenic burning. Within the region, we also studied the distribution of endangered native herbivores, wood bison (Bison bison athabascae), and domestic herbivores, horses (Equus callabus). We used six herds of animals occupying six distinct landscapes to evaluate the role of fire and energy development on boreal vegetation use by free-ranging herbivores from 2009 - 2013. Using Resource Selection Functions (RSFs) and models to evaluate spatial distribution of horses and bison across the landscapes, we found that ...