Skip to main content
Advanced Search

Filters: Tags: {"type":"Status"} (X) > Categories: Web Site (X)

100 results (82ms)   

View Results as: JSON ATOM CSV
California’s terrestrial ecosystems are particularly vulnerable to future changes in the global climate, including increased temperatures, changing precipitation patterns, and changes in human infrastructure and development. Information on the potential effects of climate change on bird communities can help guide effective conservation and inform land management decisions. We are using climate models and multi-source bird data, networked for the first time thanks to the Avian Knowledge Network, to predict current and future species distributions for California terrestrial breeding bird species. Currently, we have nearly 200 species available for viewing. These species represent 7 major habitat types found within...
thumbnail
Project funding included data production for Montana and Idaho to help support the NWI Wetlands Mapper website and the resulting data is accessible through this web tool. GNLCC project funds did not directly go toward website development.
thumbnail
The Heart of the Rockies Conservation Atlas is delivering the latest science in climate change adaptation and habitat connectivity to our land trust partners to help identify and validate selection of future conservation targets. Our Science Coordinator is curating a collection of connectivity and climate data at a scale that is useful to on-the-ground practitioners. He is working with university and agency partners to identify, screen, and procure the data. This Atlas has a collection of spatial data specific to the conservation planning needs of our land trust partners. It is grouped into themed galleries: Connectivity, Habitat, Climate Change, Working Lands, and Planning. Thousands of additional datasets are...
thumbnail
The completed bull trout eDNA survey results Online Map allows users to view the survey results in an interactive map. The map provides the ability to zoom in and look at an area of interest, as well as to create queries or select an area to download points as a shapefile.
The North American Bat Monitoring Program (NABat) is a large-scale, long-term monitoring program designed to assess the status and trends of North American bats at local, regional, and range-wide scales. Spanning the United States, Canada, and Mexico, NABat brings together an extensive network of partners who utilize the NABat program design and monitoring protocols to collect bat population data. These data are analyzed at various spatial and temporal scales and results are used to promote effective conservation actions to ensure the long-term viability of bat populations across the continent.
Categories: Data, Web Site; Tags: BIOLOGICAL RECORDS, BIOLOGICAL RECORDS, BIOLOGICAL RECORDS, BIOLOGICAL RECORDS, BIOSPHERE, All tags...
thumbnail
You may need WebEx capabilities to view these recordings. May 20, 2013: “Columbia Plateau Climate Corridors, and Centrality, Pinch-Points, and Barrier Analyses: New Products Release ” Recording available by clicking here. June 17, 2013: Bill Gaines, Conservation Science Institute. “Addressing Habitat Connectivity in Northeast Washington Forest Plan Revisions”. Recording available by clicking here. Audio challenges in the first few minutes that resolve for remainder of recording. September 16, 2013: Audrey Hatch, WA Dept. of Fish and Wildlife “Integrating connectivity science into the Western Governors Associations CHAT decision support tool”. Recording available by clicking here. November 19, 2013 (10am...
The Climate Science Alliance - South Coast is a partnership formed to develop and support a network of conservation leaders, scientists, and natural resource managers focused on sharing ecosystem-based resiliency approaches to safeguard our communities and natural resources from climate change risks.
thumbnail
The Blueprint 2.2 Data Gallery is a website dedicated to the final Blueprint 2.2 spatial data. This website is located on the South Atlantic Landscape Conservation Cooperative’s Conservation Planning Atlas. On this website, users can explore the final Blueprint 2.2 spatial data as well as the spatial data used to create Blueprint 2.2. This website features an interactive mapping feature so that users who do not have access to desktop GIS can explore the spatial data.
thumbnail
This version of the Simple Viewer displayed the South Atlantic Conservation Blueprint 2.2 at the subwatershed and marine lease block scale. In this interface you could also find information about other landscape scale conservation plans, land cover, and protection status.
thumbnail
As part of a suite of aquatic habitat assessments and tools designed to support conservation efforts in the Northeast region, the environmental consulting firm Downstream Strategies developed predictive models for estuarine habitat in Narragansett Bay and Long Island Sound, using winter flounder as the focal species to pilot the approach. This study describes the development of a flexible modeling process that can help scientists better understand the distribution, status, threats, and relative abundance of resources in dynamic aquatic habitats.The winter flounder results are built into the Fish Habitat Decision Support Tool website. The website also includes tutorial videos and additional help.
thumbnail
Formed by practitioners in Washington and British Columbia’s Cascade mountains in the summer of 2012, the Cascadia Partner Forum fosters a network of natural resource practitioners working with the Great Northern and North Pacific Landscape Conservation Cooperatives to build the adaptive capacity of the landscape and species living within it.
thumbnail
This product results from one of 5 subprojects of the North Atlantic LCC funded NROC project, “Demonstrations & Science Delivery Networks for Coastal Resilience Information in the Northeast”. Coastal storm and flood risk data were generated through the North Atlantic Coast Comprehensive Study (NAACS), an initative of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. In order to make this data widely available, the Northeast Regional Ocean Council (NROC) funded the development of a database and web services that provide streamlined access to high-resolution data on coastal storm and flood risk in the Northeast. Produced by a team from RPS ASA, the database includes projections for future climate scenarios and is a valuable resource...
This tool allows users to view aquatic barriers (dams, road-stream crossings) by the relative gain in ecological value if they were removed. Users start with a consensus map of anadromous fish priorities, which was developed based on stakeholder input as part of the North Atlantic Aquatic Connectivity Collaborative (NAACC). Beyond the consensus results, interested users can create their own scenarios by filtering input barriers to limit the analysis to a given state or watershed, changing the weights of metrics according to their importance to the analysis objectives (e.g. length of upstream network connected, number of diadromous fish present, etc.) and by modeling the removal of up to 10 barriers.The link address...
thumbnail
Whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) forests are declining across most of their range in North America because of the combined effects of mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae) outbreaks, fire exclusion policies, and the exotic pathogen Cronartium ribicola, which infects five-needle white pines and causes the disease white pine blister rust. Predicted changes in climate may exacerbate whitebark pine decline by (1) accelerating succession to more shade tolerant conifers, (2) creating environments that are unsuitable for the species, (3) increasing the frequency and severity of mountain pine beetle outbreaks and wildland fire events, and (4) facilitating the spread of blister rust.
thumbnail
The Washington Wildlife Habitat Connectivity Working Group is an open scientific collaborative effort to produce connectivity and tools for Washington and surrounding habitats. The Washington Connected Landscapes Project is the name for the suite of analysis and tools being produced by the working group. The primary thrusts of the project at this time include: scientific analyses of connectivity issues at different spatial scales for current and future landscape conditions, development of suitable analytical methods and tools necessary to support these analyses, coordination with transboundary partners to maintain connectivity across Washington’s borders, research and adaptive management to test and improve...
thumbnail
About UsThe Columbia River Basin Partner Forum (CBPF) was convened to address a unique geographic sub-region of the Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative (GNLCC). The Columbia River Basin is the drainage basin of the Columbia River and covers 668,000 km2. The Columbia River Basin includes the southeastern portion of the Canadian province of British Columbia, most of the U.S. states of Idaho, Oregon, and Washington, the western part of Montana, and very small portions of Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming. The GNLCC addresses landscape scale stressors across a large area of the northwest US and the Canadian west. The CBPF will follow the overall guidance and operating principals of the GNLCC set forth in the GNLCC’s...


map background search result map search result map Great Northern Ecological Connectivity Data Atlas Bull Trout eDNA Online Map Status Page Whitebark Pine Resilience Website Blueprint 2.2 Data Gallery Blueprint Version 2.2 Simple Viewer Estuarine Fish Habitat Assessment and Winter Flounder Pilot Study North Atlantic Coast Comprehensive Study (NACCS) Coastal Storm and Flood Risk Data Crucial Areas Assessment (CAP)s Interactive Map NWI Idaho & Montana Data for the Wetlands Mapper GNLCC Website Content: Forecasting the Impacts of Climate Change in the Columbia River Basin—Implications for Fish Habitat Connectivity Data Basin Interactive Maps: Washington Connected Landscapes Project Website: Washington Wildlife Habitat Connectivity Working Group Washington Wildlife Habitat Connectivity Working Group Webinar Series WebPage Heart of the Rockies Initiative Conservation Atlas Website: Cascadia Partner Forum Website: Columbia Basin Partner Forum Bull Trout eDNA Online Map Status Page Whitebark Pine Resilience Website NWI Idaho & Montana Data for the Wetlands Mapper Heart of the Rockies Initiative Conservation Atlas Data Basin Interactive Maps: Washington Connected Landscapes Project Website: Washington Wildlife Habitat Connectivity Working Group Washington Wildlife Habitat Connectivity Working Group Webinar Series WebPage Website: Cascadia Partner Forum Blueprint 2.2 Data Gallery Blueprint Version 2.2 Simple Viewer Website: Columbia Basin Partner Forum Crucial Areas Assessment (CAP)s Interactive Map Estuarine Fish Habitat Assessment and Winter Flounder Pilot Study GNLCC Website Content: Forecasting the Impacts of Climate Change in the Columbia River Basin—Implications for Fish Habitat Connectivity North Atlantic Coast Comprehensive Study (NACCS) Coastal Storm and Flood Risk Data Great Northern Ecological Connectivity Data Atlas