Manitoba Forest Sections – Version 5

Manitoba Forest Sections – Version 5 This spatial data represents the boundaries of Manitoba's forest sections. Forest sections are administrative areas comprised of Forest Management Units (FMUs). There are 14 uniquely named forest sections in Manitoba, nine of which are capable of growing commercial forests. Manitoba's forest sections are administrative areas comprised of Forest Management Units (FMU's). There are 14 uniquely named forest sections in Manitoba, nine of which are capable of growing commercial forests. The Aspen Parkland forest section in the south , along with the northern forest sections of Boreal Shield, Taiga Shield, Hudson Plains and Southern Arctic , are incapable of growing commercial forests. The four northern forest sections were previously called the 'white zone' and all have retained the previous white zone forest section number of 10. The northern forest section boundaries are based on the following ecozones: Hudson Plains: A subarctic area encompassing the coastal areas of Hudson Bay , that is formed into a wide, level plain, characteri z ed by poor drainage that has resulted in large and numerous peatlands, lakes, coastal marshes, and tidal flats. Alder, willow, black spruce, and tamarack are the most common tree species here . Taiga Shield: Terrain is typically flat or with rolling hills caused by glacial retreat; long eskers and uplands are common. Shallow soils remain damp year-round and regularly freeze and thaw , lead ing to tilted growing trees, sometimes called ‘drunken forests . ’ The northern edge of the forest section is delineated by the tree line. Black spruce, jack pine, birch, tamarack, white spruce, balsam fir, trembling aspen, and balsam poplar are common tree species here . Southern Arctic: The southern boundary is designated as the tree line. Moraines, eskers, kettle lakes, and ponds are common. Permafrost occurs in a continuous sheet throughout the section; polygonal hummocks often result from the freeze and thaw of the soils. Boreal Shield : This forest section represents the upper boundary of the boreal shield ecozone, characteri z ed by long, cold winters and warm summers. Permafrost is widespread. Uplands and lowland tree species are common. Soil varies from poorly drained muskeg to glacially-deposited sand. Coniferous trees include white and black spruce, balsam fir, jack pine, and tamarack . H ardwood tree species include birch, trembling aspen, and balsam poplar. Forest fires and insect outbreaks are the natural drivers of forest succession. The 10 forest sections south of forest section 10 are sometimes referred to as the 'green zone' and include Pineland, Aspen Parkland, Mountain, Interlake, Lake Winnipeg East, Churchill, Nelson River, Hayes River, Saskatchewan River and Highrock. The dataset includes the following fields : Name / Nom Alias Description SEC Section Forest section number Numéro de zone forestière SEC_NAME Section Name / Nom Forest section name Nom de zone forestière AREA_HA Area / Surface (Hectares) Area in hectares La surface en hectares 2024-10-15 Government of Manitoba manitobamaps@gov.mb.ca Nature and EnvironmentSociety and CultureManitobaForestryForest SectionsForestsPinelandAspen ParklandMountainInterlakeLake Winnipeg EastChurchillNelson RiverHayes RiverSaskatchewan RiverHighrockSouthern ArcticTaiga ShieldBoreal ShieldHudson PlainManitoba GovernmentProvince of ManitobacanadaPublicforestryzones forestièresforestslac Winnipeg Estrivière Nelsonrivière Hayesrivière SaskatchewanSubarcticTaiga of the Shieldbouclier boréalPlaines hudsonniennesgouvernement du Manitobaprovince du ManitobaGovernment information CSVCSV https://geoportal.gov.mb.ca/api/download/v1/items/42c5b15c5b5d41a0bad2c26c5534814a/csv?layers=1 ArcGIS GeoServiceESRI REST https://services.arcgis.com/mMUesHYPkXjaFGfS/arcgis/rest/services/Manitoba_Forest_Sections_Version_5/FeatureServer/1 ArcGIS GeoServiceESRI REST https://services.arcgis.com/mMUesHYPkXjaFGfS/arcgis/rest/services/Manitoba_Forest_Sections_Version_5/FeatureServer/1 GeoJSONGEOJSON https://geoportal.gov.mb.ca/api/download/v1/items/42c5b15c5b5d41a0bad2c26c5534814a/geojson?layers=1 original metadata (https://geoportal.gov.mb.ca)HTML https://geoportal.gov.mb.ca/datasets/manitoba::manitoba-forest-sections-version-5 Manitoba Forest Sections – Version 5HTML https://manitoba.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=42c5b15c5b5d41a0bad2c26c5534814a KMLKML https://geoportal.gov.mb.ca/api/download/v1/items/42c5b15c5b5d41a0bad2c26c5534814a/kml?layers=1 ShapefileSHP https://geoportal.gov.mb.ca/api/download/v1/items/42c5b15c5b5d41a0bad2c26c5534814a/shapefile?layers=1 Manitoba Forest Sections – Version 5other http://withheld

This spatial data represents the boundaries of Manitoba's forest sections. Forest sections are administrative areas comprised of Forest Management Units (FMUs). There are 14 uniquely named forest sections in Manitoba, nine of which are capable of growing commercial forests.

Manitoba's forest sections are administrative areas comprised of Forest Management Units (FMU's). There are 14 uniquely named forest sections in Manitoba, nine of which are capable of growing commercial forests. The Aspen Parkland forest section in the south , along with the northern forest sections of Boreal Shield, Taiga Shield, Hudson Plains and Southern Arctic , are incapable of growing commercial forests. The four northern forest sections were previously called the 'white zone' and all have retained the previous white zone forest section number of 10. The northern forest section boundaries are based on the following ecozones: Hudson Plains: A subarctic area encompassing the coastal areas of Hudson Bay , that is formed into a wide, level plain, characteri z ed by poor drainage that has resulted in large and numerous peatlands, lakes, coastal marshes, and tidal flats. Alder, willow, black spruce, and tamarack are the most common tree species here . Taiga Shield: Terrain is typically flat or with rolling hills caused by glacial retreat; long eskers and uplands are common. Shallow soils remain damp year-round and regularly freeze and thaw , lead ing to tilted growing trees, sometimes called ‘drunken forests . ’ The northern edge of the forest section is delineated by the tree line. Black spruce, jack pine, birch, tamarack, white spruce, balsam fir, trembling aspen, and balsam poplar are common tree species here . Southern Arctic: The southern boundary is designated as the tree line. Moraines, eskers, kettle lakes, and ponds are common. Permafrost occurs in a continuous sheet throughout the section; polygonal hummocks often result from the freeze and thaw of the soils. Boreal Shield : This forest section represents the upper boundary of the boreal shield ecozone, characteri z ed by long, cold winters and warm summers. Permafrost is widespread. Uplands and lowland tree species are common. Soil varies from poorly drained muskeg to glacially-deposited sand. Coniferous trees include white and black spruce, balsam fir, jack pine, and tamarack . H ardwood tree species include birch, trembling aspen, and balsam poplar. Forest fires and insect outbreaks are the natural drivers of forest succession. The 10 forest sections south of forest section 10 are sometimes referred to as the 'green zone' and include Pineland, Aspen Parkland, Mountain, Interlake, Lake Winnipeg East, Churchill, Nelson River, Hayes River, Saskatchewan River and Highrock.

The dataset includes the following fields :

Name / Nom Alias Description SEC Section Forest section number Numéro de zone forestière SEC_NAME Section Name / Nom Forest section name Nom de zone forestière AREA_HA Area / Surface (Hectares) Area in hectares La surface en hectares

Data and Resources

Contact Information

Electronic Mail Address: manitobamaps@gov.mb.ca

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