Return to Wildland Fire
Return to Northern Bobwhite site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to SE Firemap
Return to the Landscape Partnership Literature Gateway Website
RETURN TO LANDSCAPE PARTNERSHIP SITE
return to main site

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections

Personal tools

You are here: Home / Expertise Search / Editor, Web
370 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type
























New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
File Troff document Q3 2013 Progress Report
by Web Editor published Nov 25, 2013
Progress Report for 3rd Quarter, 2013
Located in Research / / Quarterly Reports Folder / Q3 2013
File Troff document Q3 2013 Progress Report
by Web Editor published Nov 25, 2013 — filed under:
Progress Report for 3rd Quarter, 2013
Located in Research / / Quarterly Reports Folder / Q3 2013 Reporting Materials and Reviews
File Troff document Q3 2013 Progress Report
by Web Editor published Nov 25, 2013 — filed under:
Progress Report for 3rd Quarter, 2013
Located in Research / / Quarterly Reports Folder / Q3 2013 Reporting Materials and Comments
Project chemical/x-pdb Regional Glade Conservation Assessment
by Web Editor published May 19, 2014 last modified Aug 22, 2014 10:10 AM — filed under: , ,
Glades and glade-woodland complexes are natural communities which provide high-quality habitat for several priority bird species including the Prairie Warbler, Blue-winged Warbler, Field Sparrow, Northern Bobwhite, Eastern Wood-Pewee. We also recognize the importance of glade complexes to other flora and fauna species of conservation concern.
Located in Research
Representative Species and Conservation Design
by Web Editor published Feb 19, 2012 last modified Mar 07, 2022 05:23 PM — filed under:
A presentation on the need for representative species to help develop maps, tools and landscape designs focused on providing habitat for multiple species, to help understand the current and future capability of landscapes to support fish and wildlife populations, and to help guide strategic decisions about how much of what habitat conservation actions are needed where to sustain populations.
Located in Training / Videos and Webinars / Theme: Tools and Approaches – Neighboring LCCs
Representative Species and Conservation Design
by Web Editor published Feb 19, 2012 last modified Mar 04, 2022 09:38 PM
A presentation on the need for representative species to help develop maps, tools and landscape designs focused on providing habitat for multiple species, to help understand the current and future capability of landscapes to support fish and wildlife populations, and to help guide strategic decisions about how much of what habitat conservation actions are needed where to sustain populations.
Located in Cooperative / / SC Meeting & Workshop, April 22-24, 2013 / SC Indicator and Surrogate Species Work Group
by Web Editor published Aug 19, 2014 last modified Mar 30, 2018 07:19 PM
Located in Research
Resources Available to Appalachian Conservation Partners
by Web Editor published Sep 11, 2017 last modified Sep 24, 2017 02:03 PM — filed under:
Introduction to the suite of science information resources (data, maps, decision-support and networking tools) available to enhance the work of the Appalachian Conservation Partner Community.
Located in Cooperative
File text/texmacs Responding to Climate Change on National Forests: A Guidebook for Developing Adaptation Options
by Web Editor published Mar 24, 2012 last modified Aug 26, 2013 10:12 AM — filed under: , ,
From the USDA Forest Service, comes a recently published guidebook for climate change adaptation in national forests. It provides a state-of-science summary of principles of adaptation, methods for vulnerability assessment, and tools and processes to facilitate the development of adaptation strategies and tactics. Distributed to all 176 national forest units, the guidebook is being used throughout the Forest Service and by other agencies to integrate climate change in sustainable resource management.
Located in Resources / General Resources Holdings
File Restoration of Ailing Wetlands
by Web Editor published Mar 24, 2012 — filed under:
It is widely held that humankind’s destructive tendencies when exploiting natural resources leads to irreparable harm to the environment. Yet, this thinking runs counter to evidence that many ecological systems damaged by severe natural environmental disturbances (e.g., hurricanes) can restore themselves via processes of natural recovery. The emerging field of restoration ecology is capitalizing on the natural restorative tendencies of ecological systems to build a science of repairing the harm inflicted by humans on natural environment. Evidence for this, for example, comes from a new metaanalysis of 124 studies that synthesizes recovery of impacted wetlands worldwide. While it may take up to two human generations to see full recovery, there is promise, given human will, to restore many damaged wetlands worldwide
Located in Resources / General Resources Holdings