Skip to main content

2015 LCC Network Areas

Dates

Metadata Creation Date
2015-07-29
Citation Publication Date
2015-07-01
Metadata Creation Date
2015-07-29
Citation Publication Date
2015-07-01

Citation

Landscape Conservation Cooperatives: : USA.

Summary

Landscape Conservation Cooperatives (LCCs) are public-private partnerships composed of states, tribes, federal agencies, non-governmental organizations, universities, international jurisdictions, and others working together to address landscape and seascape scale conservation issues. LCCs inform resource management decisions to address broad-scale stressors-including habitat fragmentation, genetic isolation, spread of invasive species, and water scarcity-all of which are magnified by a rapidly changing climate. For further information go to https://www.fws.gov/science/catalog. The previous 2011 LCC Network Areas data is available at https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/52f2735ee4b0a6f0bd498c2f

Child Items (1)

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

08042015_1432_LCC_Map_Asize_land.pdf 1.09 MB application/pdf
2015_LCC_Networks_shapefile.zip
“load file”
2.34 MB application/zip
08062015_Final_LCC_Map_Asize_Land_600dpi.jpg thumbnail 5.19 MB image/jpeg
Extension: 2015_Final_LCC_Data_and_Map_mpk.zip
thumbnail.png thumbnail 22.93 KB
Extension: 2015_LCC_Network_v08292016.zip
thumbnail.png thumbnail 12.27 KB

Purpose

This data is for planning purposes only. LCCs are applied conservation science partnerships with two main functions. The first is to promote collaboration among their members in defining shared conservation goals. With these goals in mind, partners can identify where and how they will take action, within their own authorities and organizational priorities, to best contribute to the larger conservation effort. The second function of LCCs is to provide the science and technical expertise needed to address the shared priorities and support conservation planning at landscape scales – beyond the scope and authority of any one organization. The organizational model of the LCC Network was intentionally structured to operate as a coordinated network of regionally-focused, self-directed partnerships. Self-direction and regional focus are important for individual LCCs to enable latitude for engaging local stakeholders on relevant high-priority issues within their geographies. Network coordination is important for LCCs to function as a larger collective to address issues at the appropriate ecological scale, to share best practices, to leverage resources, and to find economies of scale. For further information go to https://www.fws.gov/science/catalog. Collectively, LCCs comprise a seamless international network supporting landscapes and seascapes capable of sustaining abundant, diverse, and healthy populations of fish, wildlife, and plants. They provide a strong link between science and conservation delivery without duplicating existing partnerships or creating burdensome and unnecessary bureaucracy. Science-based recommendations and decision support tools produced by LCCs are readily transferable to field offices that implement on-the-ground actions. Rather than create a new conservation infrastructure from the ground up, LCCs build upon explicit biological management priorities and objectives, science available from existing partnerships (such as fish habitat partnerships, migratory bird joint ventures and flyway councils), as well as species- and geographic-based partnerships. LCCs support adaptive resource management by evaluating implementation of conservation strategies, maintaining and sharing information and data, and improving products as new information becomes available. Shared data platforms serve multiple purposes, including the collaborative development of population or habitat models under alternative climate scenarios to inform spatially explicit decision support for all partners. In the face of accelerated climate change and other 21st-century conservation challenges, LCCs regularly assess scientific information and effectiveness of conservation actions and support necessary adjustments as new information becomes available. This iterative process of information sharing helps scientists and resource managers deal with uncertainties on the landscape and provides tools to evaluate the implications of management alternatives to determine the most effective conservation actions to support shared priorities.

Additional Information

Alternate Titles

  • Landscape Conservation Cooperative

Citation Extension

citationTypeVector Digital Data Set (Polygon)
parts
typeFGDC Metadata Citation Facet
valueRemove This Facet To Recreate From Metadata File
typePublication Place
valueUSA

ArcGIS Map Package Extension

boundingBox
minY-90.0
minX-180.0
maxY90.0
maxX180.0
files
name2015_Final_LCC_Data_and_Map.mpk
contentTypex-gis/x-mpk
pathOnDisk__disk__a6/81/64/a6816404f5ba071daa1edc9841c48f6dc4324395
size10628398
dateUploadedMon Aug 10 18:51:11 MDT 2015
originalMetadatatrue
namethumbnail.png
contentTypeimage/png
pathOnDisk__disk__61/d7/8b/61d78bb1fb732b037a4f728f37b5206314c42374
imageWidth200
imageHeight133
size23480
dateUploadedMon Aug 29 18:11:49 MDT 2016
name2015_Final_LCC_Data_and_Map.mpk

ArcGIS Service Definition Extension

boundingBox
minY-15.4222
minX-180.0
maxY86.4538
maxX180.0
enabledServices
KmlServer
WMSServer
files
name2015_LCC_Network_v08292016.sd
contentTypex-gis/x-arcgis-service-def
pathOnDisk__disk__20/f2/f6/20f2f6f39f410f00df665db02426e64fa2e8e1e8
size2259056
dateUploadedMon Aug 29 18:20:22 MDT 2016
originalMetadatatrue
checksum
valuef7eb27e7c77c9a96319e5e7d5d43deb8
typeMD5
namethumbnail.png
contentTypeimage/png
pathOnDisk__disk__d2/8a/22/d28a226b546e7523811259a9d79706aff27f2225
imageWidth200
imageHeight133
size12564
dateUploadedMon Aug 29 18:20:24 MDT 2016
name2015_LCC_Network_v08292016.sd
processingStatevoid

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...