Sawlogs are in short supply in northern Ontario, and thinning has been suggested as one way to improve the situation. The only rotation-age jack pine (Pinusbanksiana Lamb.) thinning trial in the region was examined to assess how commercial thinning influenced wood quality. This report covers an unreplicated trial of a 65-year chronology of pith to bark relative densities and growth rates based on X-ray densitometry of breast-height increment cores taken from trees on two thinned plots (average spacing 2.6 and 3.4 m) and an unthinned control (average spacing 1.7 m). The trees on the treatment plots responded to thinning by producing wood with significantly lower relative density than those on the control plot. This trend continued much longer than reported for other pines and could negatively affect pulp yield or mechanical properties of lumber. Enhanced earlywood growth caused a drop in the proportion of latewood that resulted in the decline in density. Thinning may have improved moisture availability during the early and middle season and encouraged earlywood growth. Density and growth rate differences became apparent soon after treatment. Early, rapid, and inexpensive estimates of the product potential of younger thinning trials are possible using the techniques demonstrated here.
ObjectiveTo examine the process of implementing an electronic consultation (eConsult) service and evaluate its impact along key metrics outlined by the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework.DesignCross-sectional study.SettingClinics using eConsult in four provinces across Canada: Alberta, Manitoba, Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador.ParticipantsAll eConsult cases submitted in four participating provinces were included.InterventionThe eConsult service is a secure online application that allows primary care providers and specialists to communicate regarding a patient’s care. We measured the impact using system utilisation data and mandatory close-out surveys completed at the end of each eConsult.Main outcome measuresImplementation progress and impact were examined using the five categories outlined by the RE-AIM framework: reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation and maintenance.ResultsFour provinces provided data from different periods, ranging from 4 years (Alberta) to 10 months (Manitoba). Total cases completed ranged from 96 (Manitoba) to 6885 (Alberta). Newfoundland had the largest menu of available specialties (n=35), while Alberta and Quebec had the smallest (n=22). The most frequently requested groups varied across provinces, with only endocrinology appearing in the top five for all provinces. The average specialist response time ranged from 3 days (Manitoba) to 16.7 days (Alberta). Between 54% (Newfoundland) and 66% (Manitoba) of cases resulted in new or additional information. Primary care providers avoided completing referrals they had originally considered in 36% (Newfoundland) to 53% of cases (Manitoba), while only between 27 % (Quebec) and 29% (Newfoundland) of cases resulted in a referral. In every province, services demonstrated higher rates of usage in their last quarter of data than their first.ConclusionseConsult was successfully implemented in four new provinces across Canada. Implementation strategies and scope varied, but services demonstrated substantial consistency on several key metrics, most notably on whether new information was learnt and impact on decision to refer.
Thirty red spruce (Picearubens Sarg.) trees were harvested from a precommercial thinning trial near St. Margaret's Bay, Nova Scotia. Total height was measured, and samples were removed from the following five stem heights: stump height, breast height, 25, 50, and 75% of total height. Relative density and growth rate were measured using X-ray densitometry, and taper was calculated for log and tree lengths. Growth rates were significantly greater on the treatment plot than on the control plot. No significant differences in relative density were found between trees from the treatment plot (2.4 × 2.4 m spacing) and trees from the unthinned control. The relative density of the treatment and control trees was also compared with the species average relative density for red spruce. No significant differences were found, except for the relative density at stump height in the after-treatment portion of the trees from the thinned plot. The difference was not considered great enough to cause a deterioration of the mechanical properties of lumber or the yield of pulp produced from this material. The taper factor was significantly different between the treatment and control plots, but the taper factor for the treatment trees was similar to that for the spruce resource currently being processed in eastern Canada.
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