Can drones properly assess forest regeneration? Can DNA detect pests and pathogens in our forests? Why is managing canopy gaps so important to mule deer winter range? Find out in Branchlines Spring 2019.
Spring 2019
March 17, 2019 Author: UBC Forestry
Posted in: Branchlines
Related Articles
Spring 2020
Check out our Spring 2020 Branchlines, Volume 31. This edition looks at Fireguard Rehabilitation in the Alex Fraser Research Forest, addresses the need for better protection for Wild Salmon, and features exciting research on the applications of Nanocellulose materials. Want to learn more? Read on!
Read More Spring 2020CTLT Spring Institute Sessions on Remote Teaching
Colleagues, Please see the link below for further professional training programs from CTLT’s Remote Teaching Institute beginning next week (these sessions are not to be confused with the more intensive Summer Academy, which is still in the planning stages). Space is limited, so if you can’t make these ones, please keep checking back, as additional…
Read More CTLT Spring Institute Sessions on Remote TeachingSummer 2019
Why is soil design and management integral to forestry? What can be done about the human-wildlife conflict in Sri Lanka? What is bioculture, and why is it integral to urban forestry? Find the answers in Branchlines Summer 2019.
Read More Summer 2019