Reclamation of boreal forest after oil sands mining: anticipating novel challenges in novel environments

Author:

Audet Patrick12,Pinno Bradley D.2,Thiffault Evelyne3

Affiliation:

1. EDI Environmental Dynamics Inc., Grande Prairie, AB T8V 8H4, Canada.

2. Northern Forestry Centre, Canadian Forest Service, Natural Resources Canada, Edmonton, AB T6H 3S5, Canada.

3. Department of Wood and Forest Sciences, Laval University, Québec City, QC G1V 0A6, Canada.

Abstract

Boreal forests in northern Alberta have a growing anthropogenic footprint due to a rapidly growing oil sands mining industry. Although land reclamation is a necessary aspect of responsible industrial development, these activities nearly always affect higher order landscape components such as the broader landform, and its hydrology and biogeochemistry. Recent anthropogenic impacts are then believed to result in new environmental conditions and obstacles under which the boreal forest is developing, potentially leading to irreversibly different environments that could be characterized as novel ecosystems. Reflecting an emerging trend across the field of restoration ecology, these novel ecosystems are not necessarily undesirable. Instead, they are an unavoidable consequence of pervading anthropogenic effects on natural ecosystems. It is our view that successful reclamation outcomes can still be derived so long as policy and regulatory requirements are afforded the necessary scope and economic flexibility to account for the development of hybrid and novel ecosystems among highly disturbed mine sites. Hence, this analysis seeks to situate current and anticipated challenges affecting the reclamation of boreal forest following oil sands mining by describing (i) how regulatory criteria shape reclamation practices and targeted end goals and (ii) how these approaches embody latest trends and priorities in the area of restoration ecology.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

Reference69 articles.

1. Alberta Energy. 2013. Alberta’s oil sands: January fact-sheet. Government of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta.

2. Alberta Energy. 2014. Talk about oil sands: November fact-sheet. Government of Alberta. Edmonton, Alberta.

3. Alberta Environment and Water (AEW). 2012. Best Management Practices for Conservation of Reclamation Materials in the Mineable Oil Sands Region of Alberta. Prepared by D. MacKenzie for the Terrestrial Subgroup, Best Management Practices Task Group of the Reclamation Working Group of the Cumulative Environmental Management Association. 9 March 2011. Fort McMurray, Alberta.

4. Alberta Government. 1999. Conservation and reclamation information letter guidelines for reclamation to forest vegetation in the Athabasca oil sands region. C and R/IL/99-1.Government of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta.

5. Alberta Government. 2009. Environmental management of Alberta’s oil sands. Government of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta.

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