• Aucun résultat trouvé

Appendix 2. British Columbia Harvest trends by year and region. Figure A2.1.

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "Appendix 2. British Columbia Harvest trends by year and region. Figure A2.1."

Copied!
1
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

Appendix 2. British Columbia Harvest trends by year and region.

Figure A2.1. Annual variation in the percentage of the timber volume harvested during active breeding periods across the Coastal (CFR), Northern Interior (NIFR) and Southern Interior (SIFR) Forest Districts averaged across 1998-2008. Data obtained from the BC Ministry of Forestry’s Harvest Billing System (HBS), [http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/hva/hbs]

Références

Documents relatifs

In the absence of data to constrain Venus’ density profile, the interior structure of Venus is often a rescaled version of the Earth using the one-dimensional seismological

Following the internal conflicts at the Utrecht Church, "Liberal" positions on interest-bearing loan swill come into conflict with an important part of French

In the lower mantle, estimates of the initial core-mantle boundary (CMB) temperature exceeds the melting temperature of the mantle, indicating extensive lower mantle

The probability for the occurrence of sulphur plumes is enhanced in years with a lower annual mean of upwelling intensity, decreased oxygen supply associated with decreased

Since trends in volume growth with elevation, latitude, and climatic vari- ables were not significant and did not show consistent patterns among sites in this study, the

lemma shows that one of the maps in {L, L 2 , L 3 } has a point of its critical curve which is sent after at most 12 iterations onto a periodic orbit of period a multiple of ord

Recovery index of radical scavenging (DPPH, ABTS) and antiglycation activities of Vaccinium myrtillus fruit extract after each step of in vitro gastrointestinal digestion..

However, the applicability of this hypothesis for improved prediction of photosynthetic capacity and leaf nitrogen content depends on the accuracy at which we can determine