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Communicating Science - Distilling Your Message

Learn to communicate more effectively about science with people outside your field, including the general public, policy makers, the media, donors, and prospective collaborators in other disciplines.

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Negotiation Skills for Conservation Professionals: Building a Foundation

This training course provides participants with the basic principles, skills, and techniques used in natural resource negotiation.

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Forest Service Honored for Leadership in Promoting Climate Change Adaptation

For their outstanding work in raising awareness and addressing the impacts of climate change on the nation’s natural resources, the Forest Service was honored today as the first-ever recipients of the Climate Adaption Leadership Award for Natural Resources.

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NOAA, USGS and partners: Chesapeake Bay ‘dead zone’ to vary from average to slightly smaller

Scientists expect that this year’s mid-summer Chesapeake Bay hypoxic low-oxygen zone or “dead zone” – an area of low to no oxygen that can kill fish and aquatic life – will be approximately 1.58 cubic miles, about the volume of 2.3 million Olympic-size swimming pools. This is close to the long-term average as measured since 1950.

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Competitive State Wildlife Grant Awarded for Eastern Hellbender Research

Competitive State Wildlife Grant Awarded for Eastern Hellbender Research

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) recently awarded a Competitive State Wildlife Grant (C-SWG) to the Southeastern Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies (SEAFWA) to conduct research on the eastern hellbender (Cryptobranchus a. alleganiensis).

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Mid-Atlantic Highlands Action Program: Realizing the Legacy

Mid-Atlantic Highlands Action Program: Realizing the Legacy

The Chesapeake Bay Field Office Coastal Program has published a document entitled “Mid-Atlantic Highlands Action Program Realizing the Legacy” that highlights past accomplishments of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Mid-Atlantic Highlands Action Program (HAP).

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Amphibians Focus of New Statewide Study

A new study led by the U.S. Geological Survey and published this week offers compelling evidence that amphibian populations across the country are declining at a rate of almost 4 percent per year.

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Understanding Ecosystem Services from a Geosciences Perspective

Assessment of ecosystem services—the benefits society receives from ecosystems—can be improved by including broader spatial and temporal scales of geosciences perspectives.

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Southern Appalachian Forest Water Yield Down since 1970s

Climate change and forest disturbances are threatening the ability of forested mountain watersheds to provide the clean, reliable, and abundant fresh water necessary to support aquatic ecosystems and a growing human population.

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SARP Announces FY 2016 Aquatic Habitat Restoration Project Awards

SARP Announces FY 2016 Aquatic Habitat Restoration Project Awards

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) has approved National Fish Habitat Partnership (NFHP) projects to receive USFWS-NFHP FY 2016 funding.

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"Ecosystem Benefits and Risks" Research and Website Support Natural Resource Management across the Appalachians

"Ecosystem Benefits and Risks" Research and Website Support Natural Resource Management across the Appalachians

The Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative (LCC) and the U.S. Forest Service are releasing products from the first phase of an ongoing study assessing benefits of and risks to the region's "ecosystem services" -- natural assets valued by people such as clean drinking water, outdoor recreation, forest products, and biological conservation.

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Connecting the Connecticut: Partners create science-based blueprint for conserving New England’s largest river system

Connecting the Connecticut: Partners create science-based blueprint for conserving New England’s largest river system

It started two years ago as an experiment in combining big data with a big conservation vision for the 11,250 square-mile Connecticut River watershed.

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Applying LCC Tools to Issues Impacting the Keystone State

Applying LCC Tools to Issues Impacting the Keystone State

Pennsylvania is a landscape filled with abundant forests and wildlife, thousands of miles of rivers and streams, and home to a productive energy industry that includes the emergence of natural gas and alternative energy sources. Natural resource agencies and conservation organizations increasingly see the value for proactive science and tools that help inform decisions both locally and regionally in order to best protect and conserve the lands, waters, and wildlife of the state while harnessing resources that benefit society and the economy.

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Climate Science Centers and U.S. Geological Survey National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center—Annual report for 2015

2015 was another great year for the Department of the Interior (DOI) Climate Science Centers (CSCs) and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center (NCCWSC) network.

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AppLCC LCD Phase II Aquatic Expert Consultations

The Appalachian LCC consultations with aquatic experts on our Landscape Conservation Design moves next week to the second discussion about aquatic metrics, models and data.

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Tennessee River Valley Science Conference

Dr. Mary Davis, Appalachian LCC Assistant Coordinator, attended the Tennessee Valley Authority's (TVA) River Science Conference on April 11-12 at Montgomery Bell State Park near Burn, Tennessee.

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Managing Invasive Species in Wetland Restoration Projects

The Association of State Wetland Managers (ASWM) is pleased to invite you to attend the next webinar in our popular Improving Wetland Restoration Success webinar series on “Managing Invasive Species in Wetland Restoration Projects.”

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TRBN Science and Communications Teams Kick-Off Meetings

Assistant Coordinator Dr. Mary Davis represented the Appalachian LCC at two meetings that followed up on the Tennessee River Biodiversity Network (TRBN) workshop held in August 2015.

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