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WLFW Programs and Partnerships Webinar Series- Session # 1 “What is Working Lands for Wildlife”
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This Session of the WLFW East Region Conservation Webinar series was presented by Bridgett Costanzo, USDA’s Working Lands for Wildlife East Region Coordinator and Dr. Jess McGuire, PF/QF’s Working Lands for Wildlife Program Manager. This session focuses on what exactly is WLFW? This is the first session in the new mini-series “Programs and Partnerships.” Topics covered include the definition of WLFW, how it is funded, new frameworks to come, models showing the decision-making behind the frameworks, monitoring on WLFW projects, and a quick overview of the new app “Bobscapes.”
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Learning & Tech Transfer
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WLFW Conservation Webinar Series
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WLFW Programs and Partnerships Webinar Series
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Working Lands for Wildlife (WLFW) Workspaces
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The Working Lands for Wildlife (WLFW) program develops win-win approaches with producers
and private landowners. WLFW partners understand that collaboration is critical to enhance
wildlife habitat and improve agriculture and forest productivity.
We can continue to strengthen collaboration -- especially between technical experts from
federal and state agencies and non-government partner staff -- through the WLFW workspaces.
The WLFW workspaces provide online infrastructure and space for partners to share their expertise with one another, exchange resources and ideas, and plan work together on a certain species, a given habitat or land use, or a specific project. A subset of the resources here are available to producers, landowners, and communities who are interested in, or involved with, the WLFW program.
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About
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Services
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Your Drop Matters
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Just forty-five years ago, rivers in the U.S. were so polluted that some actually burned. In response, our country created the Clean Water Act amid other strong environmental legislation. Today, two-thirds of our population has never known a time when clean water wasn’t readily available. Despite improvements in the quality of drinking water, freshwater animals and habitats in the southeastern U.S. remain among the most imperiled on Earth. We have become complacent with institutional protections and haven’t challenged our personal behaviors. How can we solve the freshwater crisis starting in our own backyard? Video by TEDxChattanooga.
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Training
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Videos and Webinars