Forest crowns, snow interception and management of black-tailed deer winter habitat

The phenomenon of snow interception by forest stands is examined. Interception relationships extracted from literature are evaluated for their applicability to the silvicultural and climatic conditions of south coastal British Columbia. Hypotheses tested address: 1) the prediction of snow intercepti...

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Main Author: McNay, Robert Scott
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24855
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-248552018-01-05T17:42:49Z Forest crowns, snow interception and management of black-tailed deer winter habitat McNay, Robert Scott Forest influences - British Columbia Snow - Environmental aspects - British Columbia The phenomenon of snow interception by forest stands is examined. Interception relationships extracted from literature are evaluated for their applicability to the silvicultural and climatic conditions of south coastal British Columbia. Hypotheses tested address: 1) the prediction of snow interception, 2) comparisons of heterogeneity in snow interception between second-growth and old-growth forests, and 3) how interception and interception efficiency vary depending on forest crown completeness and storm size. General relationships regarding snow interception under continental conditions were found to hold in coastal conditions', but relationships between crown completeness and interception were weak. Storm size and melt are identified as confounding factors in making predictions about snow interception based on stand crown completeness. Several approaches to modelling snow interception are discussed. Particular reference is made to the effect of interception on energetic costs of locomotion for deer. Management of coastal forests for the interception of snow should focus on maximizing crown completeness and crown surface area. Further research is required concerning the relationships used in the simulation models. Emphasis should be placed on deer response to snowpacks, the influence of melt on snowpack development, and the influence of canopy closure on spatial distribution of snowpacks. Forestry, Faculty of Graduate 2010-05-20T04:04:22Z 2010-05-20T04:04:22Z 1985 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24855 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Forest influences - British Columbia
Snow - Environmental aspects - British Columbia
spellingShingle Forest influences - British Columbia
Snow - Environmental aspects - British Columbia
McNay, Robert Scott
Forest crowns, snow interception and management of black-tailed deer winter habitat
description The phenomenon of snow interception by forest stands is examined. Interception relationships extracted from literature are evaluated for their applicability to the silvicultural and climatic conditions of south coastal British Columbia. Hypotheses tested address: 1) the prediction of snow interception, 2) comparisons of heterogeneity in snow interception between second-growth and old-growth forests, and 3) how interception and interception efficiency vary depending on forest crown completeness and storm size. General relationships regarding snow interception under continental conditions were found to hold in coastal conditions', but relationships between crown completeness and interception were weak. Storm size and melt are identified as confounding factors in making predictions about snow interception based on stand crown completeness. Several approaches to modelling snow interception are discussed. Particular reference is made to the effect of interception on energetic costs of locomotion for deer. Management of coastal forests for the interception of snow should focus on maximizing crown completeness and crown surface area. Further research is required concerning the relationships used in the simulation models. Emphasis should be placed on deer response to snowpacks, the influence of melt on snowpack development, and the influence of canopy closure on spatial distribution of snowpacks. === Forestry, Faculty of === Graduate
author McNay, Robert Scott
author_facet McNay, Robert Scott
author_sort McNay, Robert Scott
title Forest crowns, snow interception and management of black-tailed deer winter habitat
title_short Forest crowns, snow interception and management of black-tailed deer winter habitat
title_full Forest crowns, snow interception and management of black-tailed deer winter habitat
title_fullStr Forest crowns, snow interception and management of black-tailed deer winter habitat
title_full_unstemmed Forest crowns, snow interception and management of black-tailed deer winter habitat
title_sort forest crowns, snow interception and management of black-tailed deer winter habitat
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24855
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