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A Synthesis of Climate Change Refugia Science and Management Actions to Inform Climate Adaptation in the Southwest

A Southwest CASC FY19 Funding Opportunity Project
Principal Investigator
Toni Lyn Morelli

Dates

Release Date
2019
Start Date
2019-09-01
End Date
2021-08-31

Summary

The impacts of climate change are widespread and accelerating. It is daunting for resource managers to determine how to use increasingly limited staff time and funding to conserve species and ecosystems. The Refugia Research Coalition is a national framework that brings together researchers and managers to identify and develop conservation strategies for “climate change refugia”, areas that remain relatively buffered from contemporary climate change over time and enable persistence of valued physical, ecological, and socio-cultural resources. Expanding on previous work carried out in the Northwest and Northeast regions, this project will produce a list of priority species and habitats, generated by local and regional resource managers, [...]

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PanocheHillsManagementArea_Fresno_CA_BLM.jpg
“Panoche Hills Management Area in Fresno, CA (public domain)”
thumbnail 12.58 MB image/jpeg

Project Extension

parts
typeTechnical Summary
valueScientists and natural resource managers are increasingly working together to identify ways to reduce the impacts of anthropogenic climate change. One of the primary tactics in the field of climate adaptation is the conservation of climate change refugia, areas that remain relatively buffered from contemporary climate change over time and enable persistence of valued physical, ecological, and socio-cultural resources. Recent advances are making refugia identification more realistic and relevant by considering many other components of global change biology and incorporating novel research tools. There have been great developments in fine-scale refugia mapping in the Southwest region of the U.S. in particular. This project will use the process of translational ecology and knowledge coproduction to bring together resource managers, conservation practitioners, and researchers in 4 workshops in California and Arizona to identify key valued climate-sensitive resources (e.g., species and habitats) that would benefit from a climate change refugia conservation approach. The project team will synthesize existing information and identify research gaps related to conserving refugia for the top 3-5 species/habitats selected by the workshops. Ultimately, this project will inform and improve natural resource decisions related to land protection, invasive species treatment, recreation management, and a host of other conservation challenges.
projectStatusCompleted

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
RegistrationUUID NCCWSC b0373934-8d63-4e32-85d0-14b64855fd82
StampID NCCWSC SW19-MT1739

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