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A new approach to ecological land classification for the Canadian boreal forest that integrates disturbances
Authors:Pierre Grondin  Sylvie Gauthier  Daniel Borcard  Yves Bergeron  Jean Noël
Institution:1. Ministère des Ressources naturelles, Direction de la Recherche forestière, 2700, rue Einstein, Quebec, QC, G1P 3W8, Canada
2. Laurentian Forestry Center, Canadian Forest Service, Natural Resources Canada, 1055, rue du P.E.P.S, Quebec, QC, G1V 4C7, Canada
3. Département des sciences biologiques, Université de Montréal, C.P. 6128, succursale Centre Ville, Montreal, QC, H3C 3J7, Canada
4. Institut de recherche sur les forêts, Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue, 445, boulevard de l’Université, Rouyn-Noranda, QC, J9X 5E4, Canada
Abstract:Traditional approaches to ecological land classification (ELC) can be enhanced by integrating, a priori, data describing disturbances (natural and human), in addition to the usual vegetation, climate, and physical environment data. To develop this new ELC model, we studied an area of about 175,000 km2 in the Abies balsameaBetula papyrifera and Picea mariana-feathermoss bioclimatic domains of the boreal forest of Québec, in eastern Canada. Forest inventory plots and maps produced by the Ministère des Ressources naturelles du Québec from 1970 to 2000 were used to characterize 606 ecological districts (average area 200 km2) according to three vegetation themes (tree species, forest types, and potential vegetation-successional stages) and four sets of explanatory variables (climate, physical environment, natural and human disturbances). Redundancy, cluster (K-means) and variation partitioning analyses were used to delineate, describe, and compare homogeneous vegetation landscapes. The resulting ELC is hierarchical with three levels of observation. Among the 14 homogeneous landscapes composing the most detailed level, some are dominated by relatively young forests originating from fires dating back to the period centered on 1921. In others, forest stands are older (fires from the period centered on 1851), some are under the influence of insect outbreaks and fires (southern part), while the rest are strongly affected by human activities and Populus tremuloides expansion. For all the study area and for parts of it, partitioning reveals that natural disturbance is the dominant data set explaining spatial variation in vegetation. However, the combination of natural disturbances, climate, physical environment and human disturbances always explains a high proportion of variation. Our approach, called “ecological land classification of homogeneous vegetation landscapes”, is more comprehensive than previous ELCs in that it combines the concepts and goals of both landscape ecology and ecosystem-based management.
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