A comparison of British, Swedish and British Columbian growth and yield predictions for lodgepole pine
Growth and yield information for managed stands in British Columbia is scarce, hampering the creation of prediction systems needed for a wide array of treatments and sites. Using existing information on managed stands and experience from the temperate forests in other countries offers a possible means of providing an interim solution. Lodgepole pine was used to test this approach. Similarities between unthinned yields generated by the British Columbia model (Tree And Stand Simulator — TASS) and the corresponding British system at 1500 stems per hectare initial spacing indicate that European predictions for thinned stands can be useful in estimating yield responses in British Columbia. British and Swedish projections show 4–13% more usable wood and 36–52% larger diameters at top height 28 m for thinned stands than for unthinned stands predicted for British Columbia.