UBC research blames bigger floods on clear-cutting, calls for more selective logging

A University of British Columbia researcher is calling for a reduction in clearcut logging, as well as more attention on where trees are taken down to help reduced the province's flood risk. UBC forestry professor Younes Alila is shown in an undated handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-University of British Columbia, Paul H. Joseph, *MANDATORY CREDIT*

VANCOUVER - Reducing clear-cut logging and paying more attention to where trees are removed will help reduce the flood risk in British Columbia, a researcher says.

A paper published by a team, including University of British Columbia Prof. Younes Alila, found that when 21 per cent of trees were harvested using clear-cut logging, the average flood size increased by 38 per cent in the Deadman River watershed and 84 per cent in Joe Ross Creek area, both snowy regions located north of Kamloops.

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