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21st century conservation: A vision of collaboration across landscapes
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Just one week after taking office, the Biden administration proposed an ambitious conservation agenda to stem the loss of biodiversity, enhance environmental equity and justice and curb the drivers of climate change. The agenda envisions engaging state, tribal, local and territorial officials, farmers and forest landowners, fishermen and others to conserve 30 percent of our lands and waters by 2030.
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News & Events
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78th Conference Special Session to Look at Landscape Conservation in North America
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The last decade has seen significant advancements in the nature and number of science-management partnerships that address landscape-level conservation throughout North America. Numerous federal and state agencies, as well as conservation NGO’s, have joined forces through these partnerships to advance conservation that is holistic, collaborative, adaptive and grounded in science to ensure the sustainability of our lands, waters, wildlife and cultural resources.
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News & Events
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‘As Earth’s testimonies tell’: wilderness conservation in a changing world
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Too often, wilderness conservation ignores a temporal perspective greater than the past
50 years, yet a long-term perspective (centuries to millennia) reveals the dynamic nature
of many ecosystems. Analysis of fossil pollen, charcoal and stable isotopes, combined
with historical analyses and archaeology can reveal how ongoing interactions between
climatic change, human activities and other disturbances have shaped today’s landscapes
over thousands of years. This interdisciplinary approach can inform wilderness
conservation and also contribute to interpreting current trends and predicting how
ecosystems might respond to future climate change. In this paper, we review literature
that reveals how increasing collaboration among palaeoecologists, archaeologists,
historians, anthropologists and ecologists is improving understanding of ecological
complexity. Drawing on case studies from forested and non-forested ecosystems in
Europe, the Americas, Africa and Australia, we discuss how this integrated approach can
inform wilderness conservation and ecosystem management.
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Resources
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Climate Science Documents
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A New Way to Support EBTJV-Shop Select RepYourWater Merchandise to Further our Brook Trout Conservation Efforts
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Shop Select RepYourWater Merchandise to Further our Brook Trout Conservation Efforts-The Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture (EBTJV) is excited to announce its collaboration with RepYourWater, Beyond the Pond, and the Atlantic Coastal Fish Habitat Partnership (ACFHP) to further support fish habitat conservation from whitewater to bluewater.
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News & Events
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A Review of Climate-Change Adaptation Strategies for Wildlife Management and Biodiversity Conservation
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We reviewed the literature and climate- change adaptation plans that have been developed in United States, Canada, England, Mexico, and South Africa and finding 16 general adaptation strategies that relate directly to the conservation of biological diversity. These strategies can be grouped into four broad categories: land and water protection and management; direct species management; monitoring and planning; and law and policy. Tools for implementing these strategies are similar or identical to those already in use by conservationists worldwide (land and water conservation, ecological restoration, agrienvironment schemes, species translocation, captive propagation, monitoring, natural resource planning, and legislation/regulation). Although the review indicates natural resource managers already have many tools that can be used to address climate-change effects, managers will likely need to apply these tools in novel and innovative ways to meet the unprecedented challenges posed by climate change.
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Resources
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General Resources Holdings
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Addie Thornton: Southeast Regional Partnership for Planning and Sustainability
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Addie Thornton, Project Manager of the Southeast Regional Partnership for Planning and Sustainability (SERPPAS), discusses how diverse stakeholders from the military and conservation space can learn from one another and work together to achieve meaningful outcomes at a landscape level.
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Our Community
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Voices from the Community
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Agenda - March 11, 2015 Workshop
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Urban Woodlands Conservation and Management Workshop. Organized and facilitated by the National Park Service to identify and create opportunities for greater collaboration among urban woodland researchers and managers working to restore and manage urban woodland ecosystems.
To view the goals and objectives of the workshop, please open the workshop agenda.
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Cultural Resources
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Urban Conservation
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Urban Woodlands Conservation and Restoration
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Alachua Conservation Trust
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Since 1988, Alachua Conservation Trust (ACT) has been protecting the natural, historic, scenic, and recreational resources in and around north central Florida.
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LP Members
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Organizations Search
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Amphibian and Reptile Conservancy
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ARC saves herps through a strategic, scientific, and passionate approach that allows us to make a real difference. We implement localized, regional, species-based PARCAs (Priority Amphibian and Reptile Conservation Areas) and weave them together across the country into a national strategy capable of making great impact. We practice Transformative Science with the urgency required to save those species and ecosystems at greatest risk.
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LP Members
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Organizations Search
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Analysing fossil-fuel displacement
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It is commonly assumed that fossil fuels can be replaced by alternative forms of energy. Now research challenges this assumption, and highlights the role of non-technological solutions to reduce fossil-fuel consumption.
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Resources
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Climate Science Documents