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Assessing the Vulnerability of Dryland Ecosystems to Drought in the Western U.S.

Assessing Vulnerability to Drought in Dryland Ecosystems of the Western U.S.
Principal Investigator
Seth Munson

Dates

Start Date
2015-08-01
End Date
2017-07-31
Release Date
2015

Summary

In the western U.S., rising temperatures and pronounced drought conditions pose significant challenges to public land managers. Widespread declines of multiple plant species have already been observed, providing insight into what the future could look like for vegetation in the region as conditions are projected to become warmer and drier. To understand how vulnerable western ecosystems are to drought, managers need to know which climatic and soil conditions cause habitats to change, and at what rate these changes may occur – important topics on which there is little available data. This project seeks to identify the vulnerability of habitats in the western U.S. to drought. Researchers will compare changes in plant abundance (i.e. [...]

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NCCW-2015-3_BuenosAiresNWR_AZ_AlanCressler.jpg
“Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, AZ - Credit: Alan Cressler”
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Purpose

Managers of public lands in the western U.S. face enormous challenges under recent warmer, drier conditions that are expected to worsen with climate change. This enhanced aridity can lead to permanent degradation of wildlife habitat and ecological services upon which humans depend. To help managers confront these challenges, our project pairs a network of vegetation monitoring data that managers already collect from the ground and air (satellite imagery) with climate and soil water conditions to determine which types of habitat are vulnerable to drought and climate change, what habitat changes may occur, and where across the landscape these changes will be most pronounced. Using new assessment tools, we will consider how management actions, soils, and other landscape factors can accelerate or slow-down these shifts so managers will be well-prepared to conserve and protect natural resources for future generations. Our project will occur in close collaboration with managers from several federal agencies and provide helpful products and tools that they can utilize to prepare for harmful drought impacts to the public lands they manage.

Project Extension

parts
typeTechnical Summary
valueWe propose to help managers plan for and manage ecosystems affected by ecological drought through a synthesis of plot- and remote sensing-based vegetation monitoring data collected by DOI, DOD, and other management partners in the western U.S. We will apply climate pivot point and vegetation state-and-transition assessment tools we previously developed to determine habitat types vulnerable to drought, project drought-induced habitat transformations and where they are likely to occur across the landscape. Importantly, we will incorporate historical and projected climate and land-use into the assessments to evaluate how management actions interact with drought to exacerbate vulnerability or promote habitat sustainability. Our highly qualified research team integrates dryland plant ecologists and hydrologists with the leading land use/land change remote sensing scientists at USGS, builds on a strong existing collaboration with management partners, and will target products to natural resource managers across the western U.S., including peer reviewed papers and information briefs, on-going meetings and a final workshop to transfer research results. Through this collaborative process, we will define ecological drought and develop cutting-edge assessment tools to help managers mitigate and adapt to its negative impacts in a framework that can be applied to other regions.
projectStatusIn Progress

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2015
totalFunds25835.0
parts
typeAgreement Type
valueCOA
typeAgreement Number
valueCM3870
totalFunds25835.0

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
RegistrationUUID NCCWSC 421bc7b6-4f57-4d37-9c02-f67fe7a8ba69
StampID NCCWSC NCCWSC14-MS0053

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