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Southeastern Conservation Adaptation Strategy Conservation Leadership Summit
The Summit will focus on ‘Why’ we need to define the conservation landscape of the future and 'How’ we go about achieving this goal.
Southeastern Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies Annual Conference
The annual conference of the Southeastern Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies is a forum for the exchange of ideas and critical information regarding the management and protection of fish and wildlife resources primarily in the southeast.
The Wildlife Society Meeting
North Carolina will be hosting The Wildlife Society’s 23rd Annual Conference at the Raleigh Convention Center this fall.
Work at a Landscape Scale
 
2016 Spotlight on National Park Resources
 
Announcing the January 2015 Decision Analysis for Climate Change Online Course (ALC 3196)
Have you always wanted to know how to address climate change related concerns and uncertainties using decision analysis? Do you have a small to moderate scale climate change problem you are working on and wondered if decision analysis can help you solve that problem? We have the class for you!
New Landscape Conservation Fellow Comes Onboard
Gillian Bee is the new Appalachian LCC Landscape Conservation Fellow, stationed at Clemson University. In her current role she will be working with partners in the Tennessee River Basin to provide science-based decision support.
Training Resources
 
Share Landscape Partnership and Partner Spatial Data
Describes the data sets which are available and how to request other services including a Data Request Form
Managing Climate Change Refugia to Protect Wildlife
Natural and cultural areas that will remain similar to what they are today -- despite climate change -- need to be identified, managed and conserved as “refugia” for at-risk species, according to a study published today in PLOS One.
2015 Annual Report
The 2015 Annual Report details the investment the Appalachian LCC has made over the past years that led to the creation of vital research products, tools, and a landscape conservation design framework to address the most pressing science needs in the region. It also highlights the initial activities ensuring this science becomes integrated into planning and decision making at regional, state, and local levels to ensure key habitats and ecosystems are conserved in large, interconnected areas.
Holt, Lee
 
Stream Impacts from Water Withdrawals in the Marcellus Shale Region
A new study from the Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative (LCC) and Cornell University looks at how the region's surface freshwater supply – and the health of natural systems delivering this resource – have been impacted and may be altered in the coming years under increasing water withdrawals. 
Brennan, Jean
 
Ferguson, Paige
 
hurlbert, sally
 
Smith, Elizabeth
 
Davis, Doreen
 
Stream Impacts from Water Withdrawals in the Marcellus Shale Region
Talking points for this funded research.
Funded Research and Science Products
A summary of all the Appalachian LCC funded research and project deliverables.