DID YOU KNOW?
The province of Alberta is over 60% forest.
Legend
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Alberta forests (and Nathan Fillion) are worth talking about.
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Mature Forest: Trees
Most tree species native to Alberta live a maximum of 150 years under ideal conditions. The forest industry uses many techniques to keep older forests healthy as long as possible, including creating buffer zones through strategic harvesting. This helps insulate sections of mature forest from threats like forest fires and the Mountain Pine Beetle.
Deciduous trees tend to die and decay faster than coniferous ones. When trees die and fall, they form woody debris on the forest floor – this nourishes the ground and provides food and nesting material for insects and animals.
The debris serves an important purpose that way, but it also increases forest fire risk since the dead material burns easily and can spread fire very quickly. The abundance of woody debris on a mature forest floor is part of the reason it’s important to create buffer zones around mature forests to limit the spread of forest fires.
Nathan Fillion
Oh how the mighty have fallen. You remember deciduous trees from the young forests? We talked about the Trembling Aspen being gungho to grow so much so that they don’t even need replanting? Well guess who drops off and decays faster in a mature forest? That’s right. Deciduous trees like the Trembling Aspen. Hold up, I’m getting some important information delivered on my favourite forest product, paper. Aha. By the looks of it, when those trees die and fall, they form woody debris on the forest floor that nourishes the ground for forest regeneration. It would seem that in their deaths, the trees still serve a purpose. The tree carcasses also provide food and nesting material for insects, eww, and animals, aww. The obvious takeaway is this: Just like world-famous actors, trees grow and change over time—with or without human or directorial intervention. It’s in their nature. Trees are born. They grow. Then, in their twilight years with their saplings by their side, they slip into a coma and drift off into the great unknown. Until the cycle begins again. Deciduous trees, you’ve earned my respect. And I know how important that is to you.
The province of Alberta is over 60% forest.
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