November 12 @ 1:00 pm

Forest Hydrology: Beyond Hand Waving in Professional Practice

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Science and professional practice often underestimated the power of forests in mitigating hydrology, according to a UBC professor.

Current watershed risk assessment and cumulative effect frameworks remain outdated, says Dr. Younes Alila, P.Eng., professor of hydrology in the UBC Faculty of Forestry and the presenter for a new webinar from Forest Professionals British Columbia (FPBC).

“With a changing climate, it’s time to move forward in the professional practice of hydrology guiding forestry in BC.”

In Forest Hydrology: Beyond Hand Waving in Professional Practice, learn more about:

  • misconceptions, misunderstandings, and misinformation in the current practice of forest hydrology;
  • how the power of forests in mitigating hydrology lies not at the tree or stand, but at the watershed scale;
  • how modern science reveals a sensitive hydrology to industrial clear-cut logging; and
  • how we can manage the forests in ways that minimize the risk to hydrology, and geomorphology.

When: November 12, 2024.

Time: 1:00-2:30 PM (including Q&A).

Cost: $29.00.

Alila graduated from the University of Ottawa with a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering in 1985, a master’s degree in water resources engineering in 1987, and a doctorate in engineering hydrology in 1994. Alila teaches and conducts research on climate and land use change effects on water resources.

Click the link to register for this event.

Recommended pre-reading for registrants:

Click the link to read the FPBC Webinar Terms and Conditions.

(This webinar will be recorded and available later with the same registrations fee.)

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