TY - CONF T1 - Integrated management of a temperate rainforest ecosystem through wholistic forestry: A British Columbian example T2 - Paper presented at Property Rights and the Performance of Natural Resource Systems: Social and Ecological Systems for Resilience and Sustainability August 29-30, 1994 Y1 - 1994 A1 - Evelyn Pinkerton KW - adaptiveness KW - community involvement KW - ecosystem resilience KW - Jerry Franklin KW - participatory KW - rainforests KW - riparian zone KW - transition zone KW - unique ability AB - Evelyn Pinkerton identifies the problem of logging in the temperate rainforest of the Pacific Northwest, British Columbia, and Southeast Asia. She identifies the political and scientific dimensions of the problem. She discusses the limits of the wildlife and timber and what the research uncovered. She identified the term "new forestry." She lists and describes two other types of forestry: Wholistic and Gitksan Wholistic Forestry. She discusses the detail and economics of both types. She also includes five different pie charts with a brief definition for each. JF - Paper presented at Property Rights and the Performance of Natural Resource Systems: Social and Ecological Systems for Resilience and Sustainability August 29-30, 1994 PB - Beijer International Institute of Ecological Economics CY - Stockholm, Sweden N1 - CIKARD copy is a draft outline of a paper prepared for the Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics, Stockholm Project "Social and Ecological System Linkages" U5 - 12 pp. JO - Integrated management of a temperate rainforest ecosystem through wholistic forestry ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Exploring the cloud forests of Oaxaca, Mexico JF - World Wide Fund for Nature Reports Y1 - 1990 A1 - Gary J. Martin A1 - Alejandro de Ávila ED - Olga Sheean-Stone KW - aquatic resources KW - forestry KW - grassroots development KW - Mexico KW - Oaxaca KW - participatory AB - Since many people think of Mexico as a land of deserts and coasts, few would come here in search of some of the world's most humid forests. But if you wander up the mountains facing the Gulf of Mexico or the Pacific Ocean, you will discover the cloud forest. This dense and luxuriant vegetation receives its name from the cloud banks which come drifting onto the mountainsides, dropping some fo the 2,000-4,000mm of annual precipitation. IS - Oct/Nov/Dec U5 - 17 pp. ER -