Climate change adaptation and regional forest planning in southern Yukon, Canada

被引:0
作者
A. E. Ogden
J. L. Innes
机构
[1] University of British Columbia,Sustainable Forest Management Laboratory, Department of Forest Resources Management, Faculty of Forestry
[2] Government of Yukon,Forest Management Branch, Department of Energy, Mines and Resources
来源
Mitigation and Adaptation Strategies for Global Change | 2008年 / 13卷
关键词
Adaptation; Boreal forest; Climate change; Forestry; Sustainable forest management; Forest management plans; Yukon;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent interest in sustainable forest management planning in the Yukon has coincided with growing public awareness of climate change, providing an opportunity to explore how forestry plans are incorporating climate change. In this paper, the Strategic Forest Management Plans for the Champagne and Aishihik First Nations Traditional Territory (CATT) and the Teslin Tlingit Traditional Territory (TTTT) are examined for evidence of adaptation to climate change. For each plan, management policies and practices that are also recognized as ways to adapt to climate change are identified to provide information on the incremental costs and benefits of additional adaptation efforts. A typology for classifying sustainable forest management plans according to how they address climate change is proposed and applied to the CATT and TTTT plans. This typology, which may be useful to any future retrospective assessments on how successful these or other sustainable forest management plans have been in addressing and managing the risks posed by climate change, consists of a matrix that categorizes plans into one of four types; (1) proactive-direct, (2) proactive-indirect, (3) reactive-direct, and (4) reactive-indirect. Neither of the plans available for the southern Yukon explicitly identifies climate change vulnerabilities and actions that will be taken to reduce those vulnerabilities and manage risks. However, both plans have incorporated some examples of ‘best management practices’ for sustainable forest management that are also consistent with appropriate climate adaptation responses. Even in a jurisdiction facing rapid ecological changes driven by climate change, where there is a relatively high level of awareness of climate change and its implications, forestry planning processes have yet to grapple directly with the risks that climate change may pose to the ability of forest managers to achieve the stated goals and objectives of sustainable forest management plans.
引用
收藏
页码:833 / 861
页数:28
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]  
Davidson DJ(2003)Understanding climate change risk and vulnerability in northern forest-based communities Can J For Res 33 2252-2261
[2]  
Williamson T(2006)Reducing vulnerability to climate change in the Arctic: the Case of Nunavut, Canada Arctic 60 150-166
[3]  
Parkins JR(2004)Elicitation of expert judgments of climate change impacts on forest ecosystems Clim Change 49 279-307
[4]  
Ford J(2003)Integrating sustainable development into the fourth assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Climate Policy 3 S9-S17
[5]  
Pearce T(2007)Forest management in a changing climate: building the environmental information base for the southwest Yukon For Chron 83 806-809
[6]  
Smit B(2007)Incorporating climate change adaptation considerations into forest management and planning in the boreal forest Int For Rev 9 713-733
[7]  
Wandel J(2007)Perspectives of forest practitioners on climate change adaptation in the Yukon and Northwest Territories of Canada For Chron 83 557-569
[8]  
Allurut M(2005)A structured decision-making approach to climate change adaptation in the forest sector For Chron 81 97-103
[9]  
Shappa K(2003)A globally coherent fingerprint of climate change impacts across natural systems Nature 421 37-42
[10]  
Ittusujurat H(1996)Boreal forest responses to climate-change scenarios along an ecoclimatic transect in central Canada Clim Change 34 179-190