Filters: Tags: Land Managers (X) > Categories: Publication (X)
4 results (63ms)
Filters
Date Range
Extensions Types Contacts
Categories Tag Types
|
Land managers in the Great Basin are working to maintain or restore sagebrush ecosystems as climate change exacerbates existing threats. Web applications delivering climate change and climate impacts information have the potential to assist their efforts. Although many web applications containing climate information currently exist, few have been co-produced with land managers or have incorporated information specifically focused on land managers’ needs. Through surveys and interviews, we gathered detailed feedback from federal, state, and tribal sagebrush land managers in the Great Basin on climate information web applications targeting land management. We found that a) managers are searching for weather and climate...
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: CMIP5,
California,
Completed,
Coproduction,
EARTH SCIENCE > LAND SURFACE > LANDSCAPE,
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation,
Report;
Tags: Data Visualization & Tools,
North Central CASC,
Science Tools For Managers,
Social Science,
climate change,
Conservation Biology Institute (CBI) has been developing web applications to centralize and serve credible and usable information that allows natural resource managers, as well as the general public, to better understand the challenges posed by on-going environmental change. In particular CBI has designed a series of climate consoles that provide natural resource managers the most recent 5th Climate Model Intercomparison Program (CMIP5) climate projections, landscape intactness, and soil sensitivity for a series of reporting units over the western United States. The publically available web sites were refined based on feedback from a variety of users. In this paper, we describe each of the tools developed as open-source...
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: CMIP5,
California,
Completed,
Coproduction,
EARTH SCIENCE > LAND SURFACE > LANDSCAPE,
The NE CASC boasts an interdisciplinary array of scientists, from ecologists to biologists, hydrologists to climatologists, each contributing new, original academic research to advance our understanding of the impacts of climate change on wildlife and other natural resources in the Northeast. Needed was an outreach specialist who would interface directly with the management agencies who benefited from this research to aid the integration of this research into their management planning as part of adapting to climate change. A climatologist was preferred to address queries about climate modeling, climate change uncertainties, and other areas of climate science outside the expertise of NE CASC ecologists, biologists,...
Categories: Publication;
Types: Citation,
Report;
Tags: Northeast,
Northeast CASC,
Science Tools for Managers,
State of the Science,
climate change,
|