Natural Sciences
Northwest Region
Lesser Slave Lake Provincial Park
The majority of research is conducted around the Lesser Slave
Lake Bird Observatory (LSLBO) and the Boreal Centre for Bird Conservation (BCBC)
located in Lesser Slave Lake Provincial
Park.
Kananaskis Region
Historical Fire Regimes of Kananaskis
Country
Wildfire is a natural ecosystem process that is vital to
ecosystem health and species diversity. Over the last several
decades, fires have become less common due to effective fire
suppression. Loss of fire is having impacts on forest health,
species diversity and water resources and may exacerbate the
effects of changing climate. Restoring fire to the landscape
through prescribed fires is important for
maintaining healthy ecosystems.
Scott
Jevons is studying historical frequency and patterns of
wildfire to develop a strong science-based foundation for
reintroducing fire to the landscape. Studies are underway to
determine fire regimes for Montane and Sub-alpine natural
subregions.
Several historical fire studies have already been done for the
Kananaskis area. The aim of these current studies is to build on
past research by collecting new fire history data, refining
methodologies and types of analysis to determine the temporal and
spatial range of variation in fire frequency.
South Region
Cypress Hills Interprovincial Park-Alberta - Park
Research
- Re-established cougar
population
- Forest and tree encroachment into Fescue
Grasslands
- Forest and fire management
strategy
- Bird-banding station (new pilot project) operated by the
Calgary Bird Banding Society
Dinosaur Provincial Park - Park
Research
Writing-on-Stone Provincial Park - Park Research &
Management
- MultiSAR
study
- Rock art monitoring project
- Range vegetation assessment (West Block)
- Resource inventory (West Block)
Other Research Projects
West Central
Sundance Provincial Park (Site
Information)
- Defining protected area boundaries based on vascular-plant
species richness from archived satellite imagery. This study
developed an innovative method to count plant diversity from space
to: (a) define an ecologically relevant park boundary; and (b)
enable land managers to identify biodiversity hotspots on the
landscape and integrate this into regional land-use plans.
-
- Published in: Biological Conservation (2012)
- Authors: G.Z. Sass, M. Wheatley, D.A. Aldred, A.J. Gould and
I.F. Creed
- Affiliations/collaborations: University of Western Ontario,
Alberta Tourism, Parks & Recreation
Willmore Wilderness Area (Site
Information)
- Marten and fishers: how the spatial distribution of one species
affects that of another within shared landscapes. This study shows
that for successful species management within a park (including
threatened/listed species), providing decent habitat is not enough.
It is necessary to consider what else might be successful in that
particular habitat, for the other factor may prevent the successful
persistence or recovery of the desired species. In this study, the
absence of one species significantly explained the occurrence of
the other.
-
- Published in: Ecography (2012)
- Authors: Jason T. Fisher, Brad Anholt, Steve Bradbury, Matthew
Wheatley and John Volpe
- Affiliations/collaborations: Alberta Innovates, TPR, SRD,
University of Victoria
- Woodland Caribou: site versus landscape-scale approach to
management. If we are interested in recovering a species, it is
beneficial to understand how to interpret data collected at small
sites versus large areas. This study focused on woodland caribou to
develop models that account for these scale issues and aid in
critical habitat identification, species recovery and caribou-fire
planning.
-
- Published in: Ecological Applications (2011)
- Authors: DeCesare, Nicholas J., Hebblewhite, M., Schmiegelow,
F., Hervieux, D., McDermid, G., Neufeld, L., Bradley, M.,
Whittington, J., Smith, K., Morgantini, L. E., Wheatley, M. and M.
Musiani
- Affiliations/collaborations:University of Montana, University
of Alberta, University of Calgary, Parks Canada, Weyerhaeuser Ltd.,
SRD, Alberta Tourism, Parks & Recreation
- Grizzly Bears: we know where the bears are, but where do they
breed? Remote cameras were used to identify breeding habitat for
grizzly bears. This is a practical, cost-effective method for
long-term monitoring of threatened species in Alberta's parks and
adjacent park systems.
-
- Published in: submitted to Journal of Applied Ecology
(2012)
- Authors: Jason T. Fisher, Matthew T. Wheatley and Darryl
MacKenzie
- Affiliations/collaborations: Alberta Innovates, Alberta
Tourism, Parks & Recreation, Proteus Research & Consulting
Ltd (Dunedin, New Zealand).