Title: Mount Robson Provincial Park Ecosystem Management Plan
1Mount Robson Provincial Park Ecosystem Management
Plan
-
- Rebecca Boronowski
- Brett DeGregorio
- Isaac Paulman
2Framework
- Description of the Ecosystem Management plan
- Need for plan
- Description of park
- Goals and objectives
- Constraints to management
- Four Ecosystem management zones (EMZs)
- Actions already taken
3Framework cont.
- Management Plan Critique
- 12 criteria influenced by Grumbine (1994)
- Scoring system from 1-10
- Pros and Cons with regard to each ecosystem
management theme
- Summary
4The Need for this Plan
- To adapt the BC Parks Master Plan to Mount Robson
Provincial Park in order to meet specific
objectives
5Description of the Park
- Located on West slope of Canadian Rockies in
British Columbia adjacent to the Alberta border
- Encompasses 219,534 Ha.
- Comprises 4 biogeoclimatic Zones
- Alpine tundra
- Englemannn Spruce-Subalpine Fir
- Sub-Boreal Spruce
- Interior Cedar Hemlock
6Description of the Park cont
- Designated as a World Heritage Site by the United
Nations
- Large tracts of even aged lodgepole pines
- Regeneration from burning of railroad
construction from 1913-1915
7Management Goals and Objectives
- To provide an area for the conservation of
biological diversity of natural forested and
non-forested ecosystems
- To permit natural disturbance regimes such as
fire and beetle epidemics to proceed unimpeded
8Constraints to Management
- Conservation of Biological Diversity
- Protection of critical wildlife habitats,
habitats of endangered/threatened plants and
animals, important old forest areas,
ecologically-significant vegetation, and
maintainance and creation of target seral stage
distributions - Adjacency Issues
- Consideration of management objectives of
neighbors such as Robson Valley Forest District,
Jasper National Park, and adjacent timber lands
9Constraints to Management cont
- Recreation and Visitor Management Objectives
- Visitor safety, protection of cultural and
heritage resources, maintenance of water quality,
and considerations for viewscapes
10The Management Plan
- Divide the park into 4 ecosystem management zones
(EMZs)
- Suppression Zone (EMZ1)
- Prescription Zone (EMZ2)
- Natural Zone (EMZ3)
- Travel Corridor (EMZ4)
- Boundaries delineated using topographic features
and encompassing areas of similar vegetative
features
11The Management Plan
- Each of the four EMZs managed with four main
objectives in mind
- Biodiversity Conservation
- Forest Fire
- Forest Health
- Wildlife
12Management of the Suppression ZoneGoals
Action
- Establish Old Forest Stands
- Complete Fire Suppression
- Full fire suppression
- Reduction of fuel loads
- Contain and confine all fires
- Education programs for visitors
- Low intensity surface burns
- Manipulation of tree species composition
13Management of the Prescription ZoneGoals
Action
- Provide summer and winter habitat for endangered
caribou
- Provide habitat for many species of ungulates
- Prevent mountain pine beetle epidemics from
spreading out of the park
- Fire suppression to promote old forest habitat
- Using prescribed burns to avoid large natural
fires and beetle outbreaks
14Management of the Natural ZoneGoals
Actions
- Allow natural disturbance processes to occur
unchecked
- Halt beetle outbreaks
- Assessment of old forest habitat
- Complete lack of fire suppression, topography
should halt spread
- Early detection and suppression
- Inventory area and distribution of old forest
15Management of the Travel CorridorGoals
Actions
- Stop spread of fire throughout corridor
- Control animal movements
- Establish network of fire weather stations and
monitor fire weather
- Vegetation manipulation, fencing, and reflectors
to avoid animal- car collisions
16Management of the Travel Corridor cont.Goals
Actions
- Stop spread of non-natives
- Contain large scale beetle outbreaks while
allowing small outbreaks to proceed
- Development of eradication programs
- Early detection and use of pheremones with single
tree and other silvicultural treatments.
- Allow forest to progress to beetle resistant
stages
17Proposed Implementation
- Conduct inventories of rare or endangered species
within the park
- Create and utilize spatial information to
identify critical wildlife habitat
- Determine current levels of non-native vegetation
along ROWs
- Develop and carry out eradication methods
- Reduce ignitions and forest stand fuels by
manipulating composition and structure around
high use areas
- Establish fire weather stations
18Proposed Implementation
- Develop prescribed burn implementation and
research program
- Ongoing surveillance of pest outbreaks
- Increased public awareness of forest health
issues
- More precisely determine winter habitat
requirements for caribou
- Reduce ungulate use of forests near highways
- Sware-flex reflectors/one way fencing
- Decrease attractive vegetation
- Plant palatable vegetation along gas line ROWs
19Action Thus Far
- Installation of two fire weather stations near
Park Headquarters and in Upper Fraser Watershed
(99)
- Allowing Brule fire (205 Ha) in 96
- Winter habitat assessment for mountain caribou
(98)
- Allowing the Moose fire (2500 Ha) in 98
- Installation of Sware-flex wildlife reflectors
- Completion of a preliminary rare and endangered
vascular plan species inventory in 99
- Aerial mountain pine beetle mapping and ground
surveys in 99
- Fire management plan in 2000
20Ecosystem Critique
- The plan presented was an adequate ecosystem
management plan that we believe would
successfully, yet not perfectly, meet the goals
and the objectives of the park - We developed critique criteria of our own, that
was influenced by Grumbines (1994) dominant
themes of ecosystem management, to evaluate this
management plan as a truly successful ecosystem
management plan - We used 12 grading criteria and scored each theme
on a scale of 1-10
21Ecosystem Patterns and Processes Score 10
-
- Effort to keep disturbance regimes as natural as
possible
- Managed for Mountain pine beetle (MPB) and fire
disturbances
- Made no mention of possible implications of
management techniques of distribution and
occurrence of small scale disturbances such as
wind and ice
22Interagency Cooperation Score 9 -
- The plan recommends cooperation with 11 different
organizations and industries
- Doesnt mention cooperation with adjacent timber
industry landowners
- Only makes recommendations for cooperation,
doesnt go any further
23Humans as a Part of Nature Score 9 -
- Management is guided by differing recreation
levels throughout the park
- Safety and aesthetics are constantly considered
- Safety along highway and railroad right of ways
is a dominant concern throughout the plan
- Does not take into account the effects of
management on ecosystem processes
24Ecological Boundaries Score 8 -
- Plan takes into account adjacent parks and timber
lands
- Plan creates corridors for species travel into
and out of park boundaries
- Plan takes into account spread of disturbances
over park boundaries
- No mention of the role Alberta will play in
management of the park
- No mention of the management of the adjacent
landowners
25Data Collection Score 8 -
- Calls for implementation of weather stations
- Calls for complete plant and animal inventories
- Calls for research into ungulate-habitat
relationships
- Effectiveness of sware reflectors
- Comprehensive BMP mapping
- Habitat assessment
- Studies of highway ROW mortality
26Adaptive Management Score 7 -
- Provides for monitoring
- EMZ boundaries may be changed if necessary
- No mention of accountability
- No time scale to measure success on
- No mention of alternatives
27Hierarchical Context Score 6 -
- Landscape level, takes into account adjacent
landowners
- Ecosystems, EMZ based upon ecosystem boundaries
- Population, ungulate populations considered
- No mention of fine scale management, from stand
level on down
28Values Score 6 -
- Safety and recreation always considered
- Aesthetics important
- Education important
- No stakeholder input
- No mention of what recreation is allowed within
park
29Viable Populations Score 5 -
- Endangered Caribou and other ungulates (moose,
elk, deer) receive considerable attention
- Lodgepole pine forests also accounted for
- No mention of other specific species within park
or management for them
- No mention of using caribou as indicators
30Monitoring Score 5 -
- MPB outbreaks
- Cleaning of ROW reflectors
- Redefinitions of BMP distributions, and hazard
reassessments
- Mention of who should do what
- No clear section on monitoring
- Control of invasives?
- Indicator species?
- Species inventories after management?
- Maintanance of fire buffer strip?
31Economic Feasibility and Sustainability
Score 2 -
- No mention other than costly ROW management and
reflectors
- Mentions need for cost benefit analysis on ROW
collissions
- No mention of costs, short term or long term
32Stakeholder Consideration Score 2 -
- Protection and Aesthetics for recreationists
- No public meetings
- No mention of input from Alberta
- No mention of support/opposition from public
33Summary
- The Mount Robson Provincial Park Management Plan
very closely resembles an effective ecosystem
management plan
- Ahead of its time for 1996
- Successfully satisfies most of Grumbines
dominant themes for ecosystem management
- Did not address certain areas such as stakeholder
input and economic feasibility
- Overall a very impressive plan that addresses
most of the dominant themes of ecosystem
management and meets with our approval.