Reports and References

for Populus tremuloides / Symphoricarpos albus / Osmorhiza berteroi (trembling aspen / common snowberry / mountain sweet-cicely)

Reports from BC Conservation Data Centre

BC Community Summary

 
View Map

Mapped Known Locations

Range Map

Distribution of ecological community based on known occurrence within current mapping of Biogeoclimatic units.

Other Related References

B.C. Ministry of Forests, Lands, and Natural Resource Operations. Biogeoclimatic Ecosystem Classification (BEC) Map, WHSE_FOREST_VEGETATION.BEC_BIOGEOCLIMATIC_POLY [ESRI ArcSDE format]. Version 9. Ministry of Forests, Lands, and Natural Resource Operations, Forest Analysis and Inventory Branch, Victoria, B.C. Updated Regularly.

 

Daigle, P. 1996. Fire in the Dry Interior Forests of British Columbia. British Columbia Ministry of Forests Research Program Extension Note 08:5pp.

 

Fechner, G.H. and J.S. Barrows. 1976. Aspen stands as wildfire fuelbreaks. USDA Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station, Fort Collins, Colorado. (Eisenhower Consortium Bulletin 4):29pp.

 

Iverson, K. and C. Cadrin. 2003. Sensitive Ecosystems Inventory: Central Okanagan, 2000-2001. Volume 1: Methodology, Ecological Descriptions, Results and Conservation Tools. Technical Report Series No. 399, Canadian Wildlife Service, Pacific and Yukon Region, British Columbia. 219pp.

 

Iverson, K., C. Cadrin, D. Spaeth Filatow, and C. Erwin. 2004. Sensitive Ecosystems Inventory: Central Okanagan, 2000-2001. Volume 2: Terrestrial Ecosystem Mapping, Surface Erosion and Slope Stability, and Expanded Legend. Unpublished report. Minist. Environment, Victoria, BC. and Canadian Wildlife Service, Pacific and Yukon Region.

 

Steneker, G.A. 1974. Factors affecting suckering of trembling aspen. For. Chron. 50:32-34.

 

Terrestrial Ecosystem Mapping [TEM] of portions of the PPxh1 and IDFxh1 in the Central Okanagan. 2002i. Prepared for the Regional District of the Central Okanagan and the Ministry of Sustainable Resource Management, by K. Iverson, C. Erwin, C. Sinnemann, L. Lacelle and D. Spaeth Filatow. 1:20,000 spatial data.

 

Cross-Linked Information Resources (CLIR): an umbrella search web application that allows users to use a single window to simultaneously search six provincial environmental and natural resource information e-libraries and provides access to digital documents in these e-libraries.