美国西北太平洋国家森林恢复管理能力空间数据库。

C. Ringo, A. Ager, M. Day, Sarah Crim
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引用次数: 4

摘要

林格,克里斯;艾格,艾伦A.;Day, Michelle A.;克里姆,萨拉,2016。美国西北太平洋国家森林恢复管理能力空间数据库。将军技术代表PNW-GTR-919。俄勒冈州波特兰:美国农业部、林务局、西北太平洋研究站。71页。了解减少野火风险和恢复西部国家森林干燥森林的能力是林务局启动的新的加速恢复计划的关键部分。虽然许多社会和生物物理因素会影响恢复计划的实施能力,但一个关键的驱动因素是森林规划、土地指定和相关管理方向。这些土地用途指定和保护区旨在提供一系列生态系统服务(娱乐、野生动物、水、木材、研究等),是根据《国家森林管理法》创建的。在许多情况下,它们后来被更新,以考虑到对受威胁和濒危物种的立法保护。在生物物理环境、火灾制度和无数旨在保护景观弹性的管理限制方面,个别土地指定具有不同的属性。尽管指定森林计划对评估恢复能力很重要,但由于缺乏区域尺度的标准化空间数据,因此难以对恢复潜力和优先事项进行全面的区域和国家评估。作为美国林业局太平洋西北地区更广泛的恢复潜力研究的一部分,我们从现有的森林规划中获得了空间数据,并根据管理限制将800多个不同的土地划分为五个不同的类别,然后为该地区创建了一个无缝的空间数据集。然后,我们检查了不同类别的管理相对于主要的火灾制度的组成。我们还生成了该地区国家森林管理类别(我们称之为“土地类别”)的地图集,可用于了解单个森林管理限制的空间分布。这些数据可以在该区域内进行更大规模的评估和优先级分析,并为其他区域提供一个案例研究模板,以进一步推进国家范围内的恢复和燃料管理潜力评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A spatial database for restoration management capability on national forests in the Pacific Northwest USA.
Ringo, Chris; Ager, Alan A.; Day, Michelle A.; Crim, Sarah. 2016. A spatial database for restoration management capability on national forests in the Pacific Northwest USA. Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-919. Portland, OR: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station. 71 p. Understanding the capacity to reduce wildfire risk and restore dry forests on Western national forests is a key part of prioritizing new accelerated restoration programs initiated by the Forest Service. Although a number of social and biophysical factors influence the ability to implement restoration programs, one key driver is the suite of forest plan land designations and associated management directions. These land use designations and conservation reserves, which are intended to provide an array of ecosystem services (recreation, wildlife, water, timber, research, etc.), were created under the National Forest Management Act. In many cases, they have subsequently been updated to account for legislated protection for threatened and endangered species. Individual land designations have distinct properties in terms of biophysical settings, fire regimes, and a myriad of management constraints intended to conserve landscape resiliency over time. Despite the importance of forest plan designations for assessing restoration capacity, standardized spatial data at regional scales do not exist, making comprehensive regional and national assessments of restoration potentials and priorities difficult. As part of a broader study of restoration potential in the Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest Region, we obtained spatial data from existing forest plans and categorized more than 800 different land designations into five distinct categories according to management restrictions, then created a seamless spatial dataset for the region. We then examined the composition of the different categories of management with respect to the dominant fire regime. We also generated an atlas of management categories (which we are calling “Land Classes” of the national forests in the region, which can be used to understand the spatial distribution of management restrictions on individual forests. The data enable broader scale assessments and prioritization analyses within the region, and provide a case study template for other regions to follow to further advance national scale assessments of restoration and fuel management potential.
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