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LIVING DATA PROJECT STORIES

Conifer Forest Recovery After Prescribed Fire

7/31/2025

 
Data Rescue Intern: Mohammadjavad Meghrazi
​

In fall 2021, I participated in the Living Data Project Data Rescue internship, working on a dataset on conifer forest recovery after prescribed fire, collected by Dr. Phil Burton, a professor emeritus at the University of Northern British Columbia. The dataset contains the state of forest vegetation, seedling regeneration, and environmental conditions for up to 6 years after fire, across three locations in British Columbia and Alberta provinces. This dataset can help in understanding the determinants of forest recovery after fire. As an intern, I was in charge of cleaning the data and putting different pieces of it together into a format that is readily usable. This was a valuable experience and helped me improve my skills in data handling in R.

Ontario forest birds at risk program (FBAR)

7/31/2025

 
Data Rescue Intern: Kennedy Zwarych

In the Winter of 2024, I was privileged to complete a data rescue internship for the Ontario Forest Birds at Risk (OFBAR) program within Birds Canada. From approximately 1971 to 2017, OFBAR was collecting data on rare and at-risk birds without a standardized survey protocol. This data was a combination of incidental observations, property walk-throughs, and irregularly timed point counts. My first task was to collect, clean and combine all information into a usable format that then could be uploaded to a data portal called NatureCounts. NatureCounts allows visitors to interact with one of the largest datasets of birds worldwide. It hosts data from bird banding, bird monitoring and also citizen based bird surveillance programs. Luckily for me, there are clearly outlined formats that data must fit into before being uploaded to NatureCounts.
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Photo from Birds Canada website

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Water health and data rescue for Canada's Watershed Reports

7/31/2025

 
Data Rescue Intern: David Zilkey

​In January 2025, I had the opportunity to complete a data rescue internship with Water Rangers as part of the Living Data Project. Water Rangers is a non-profit organization whose goal is to empower communities to protect and steward their local waterways. They do this in several ways, including the production of educational materials and water testing kits designed for use by citizen scientists.
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Figure 1: Interactive Watershed Reports map from www.watershedreports.ca. Users can click on their watershed to explore its report and zoom in to individual subwatersheds.

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Long-term vegetation and soil data from Banff & Jasper Forests

7/31/2025

 
Data Rescue intern: Mobina Gholamhosseini

During Fall 2023 to Winter 2024, I had the opportunity to take part in a data rescue internship through the Canadian Institute of Ecology and Evolution’s Living Data Project (LDP), supported by an NSERC CREATE. As a graduate student at the Université de Montréal, I was thrilled to contribute to the accessibility of valuable ecological data. The focus of the internship was on a valuable dataset originally collected in 1967–68 from 63 lodgepole pine-dominated forest stands in Banff and Jasper National Parks (Alberta, Canada). These data — on soils, trees, and understory vegetation — represent an important snapshot of forest conditions from over 50 years ago, collected during the MSc thesis work of Roger Hnatiuk.
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New Brunswick Historical Maps Digitization

7/31/2025

 
Data Rescue Intern: Yiduo “Harry” Zhang 
​

​The 1957-1958 New Brunswick topographic map series carries valuable data of historical land cover, land use, and landscape feature locations throughout the province that are only available on paper. Many of these paper maps currently in possession of the Canadian Forest Service also contain handwritten annotations about historical field sample sites cumulated through decades of work done by various researchers from the agency. With its provincial scope and a resolution of 1:50,000 scale, this historical dataset could prove invaluable for studies of species distribution and habitat change. However, in order to effectively utilize, store, and distribute this spatial dataset, it first needs to be digitized. 
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Caption: Screenshot of the georeferenced maps
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Coastal Giant Salamanders in the Chilliwack River Valley

7/31/2025

 
Data Rescue Intern: Sasindu Gunawardana

In the summer of 2024, I had the opportunity to work as a data rescue intern with the Living Data Project. During my internship, I worked on a crucial dataset belonging to Dr. John Richardson from UBC, which documents a long-term (1994–2001) mark-recapture study of Coastal Giant Salamanders in 12 small streams in the Chilliwack River Valley, British Columbia.


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Marine radar counts of Marbled Murrelets

7/31/2025

 
Data Rescue Intern: Sarah Ravoth

In winter 2024, I was an intern with Environment and Climate Change Canada through the LDP program, working with a long-term seabird dataset. Specifically, I worked with data collected on marbled murrelets, a small seabird found in the North Pacific. Marbled murrelets spend most of their time foraging at sea and breed in old-growth forests along the coast; they are listed as Threatened under the Canadian Species at Risk Act primarily due to loss of old growth nesting habitat.
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Survey boat with radar station anchored at Power River catchment entrance.

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