2005
DOI: 10.5558/tfc81717-5
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An adaptive management process for forest soil conservation

Abstract: Soil disturbance guidelines should be based on comparable disturbance categories adapted to specific local soil conditions, validated by monitoring and research. Guidelines, standards, and practices should be continually improved based on an adaptive management process, which is presented in this paper. Core components of this process include: reliable monitoring protocols for assessing and comparing soil disturbance for operations, certification and sustainability protocols; effective methods to predict the v… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Commensurate with this is the need for long-term research because in many temperate forest ecosystems it may take up to two decades (or longer) to establish relationships between soil disturbance and tree growth (Morris and Miller 1994). In addition to this validation, there is also a need for compliance (implementation) and effectiveness monitoring of soil disturbances to demonstrate management success and track these with the longer-term effects, so changes to criteria and standards can be made as new research data become available (Curran et al 2005a).…”
Section: Mots Clé Smentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Commensurate with this is the need for long-term research because in many temperate forest ecosystems it may take up to two decades (or longer) to establish relationships between soil disturbance and tree growth (Morris and Miller 1994). In addition to this validation, there is also a need for compliance (implementation) and effectiveness monitoring of soil disturbances to demonstrate management success and track these with the longer-term effects, so changes to criteria and standards can be made as new research data become available (Curran et al 2005a).…”
Section: Mots Clé Smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Implementation of these guidelines involves development and maintenance of policy, guidance documents and training, monitoring, reporting protocols and research that facilitate application of improved technical knowledge and practical experience. This is best done in an adaptive management framework, pairing the operational efforts with the generation and tracking of new research (Curran et al 2005a).…”
Section: Mots Clé Smentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Concurrently, disturbance categories should be revised under an adaptive management process (Curran et al 2005a), as results become available from monitoring, operational trials, and research studies like the Long-Term Soil Productivity (LTSP) network (Powers et al 2005). Consistent categories would enable those defining best management practice guidance (BMPs) and thresholds for severity and extent of disturbance to maintain soil productivity and hydrologic integrity to be consistent with disturbance category definitions.…”
Section: Observations Of Soil Physical Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our role as scientists is to provide technical direction that enables effective communication and comparison of operational and research results. In recent papers, we have described progress towards a common approach in the Pacific Northwest (Curran et al 2005b), and an adaptive management approach for soil conservation (Curran et al 2005a).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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