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Landscape Partnership Resources Library

NCTC SDM Course Announcement Jun 2014

Structured Decision-Making (SDM) Course Announcement Jun 2014 ALC 3159, National Conservation Training Center (NCTC).

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Summary of Q3 2013 TOT Review

Review by Technical Oversight Team of 3rd Quarter 2013 report

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Summary of Q3 2013 TOT Review

Review by Technical Oversight Team of 3rd Quarter 2013 report

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Summary of Q3 2013 TOT Review

Review from Technical Oversight Team of 3rd Quarter Report

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Shale Gas Development Probability

Shale Gas Development Probability

This map depicts the probability of future gas shale development for the Appalachian LCC geography.

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Coal Development Probability

Coal Development Probability

This map depicts the future probability of development for Coal throughout the Appalachian LCC.

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Progress Report for Second Quarter 2012

Report from vendor of Climate Change Vulnerability Project for second quarter of 2012

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Q3 2013 Progress Report

Progress Report for 3rd Quarter, 2013

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ALCC 2012-01 3rd Qtr '13 LiteratureReview

Literature Review of Freshwater Classification Frameworks for the Appalachian LCC Region

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Q3 2013 Progress Report

Progress Report for 3rd Quarter, 2013

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Q3 2013 Progress Report

Progress Report for 3rd Quarter, 2013

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Interpretive Text and Graphics for AppLCC Web Portal (data)

Interpretive Text and Graphics for AppLCC Web Portal (data)

This document presents map images and text that describes the data that can be posted to the AppLCC web portal. The arrangement follows the layout of the Appalachain Landscape Conservation Cooperative GIS Datasets.

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Interpretive Text and Graphics for AppLCC Web Portal (conservation planning tools)

Interpretive Text and Graphics for AppLCC Web Portal (conservation planning tools)

We have provided some interpretation material and text for conservation planning tools. These programs have been grouped into broad, sometime overlapping purposes. These brief descriptions of the various conservation planning tools can be put up on the AppLCC web portal, for users to get an idea about the tools available and what purposes they could serve. We have alo provided other links, where users can get detailed information about the tool.

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List of Conservation Planning Tools, Functions, and Relevance to AppLCC Conservation Planning Goals

List of Conservation Planning Tools, Functions, and Relevance to AppLCC Conservation Planning Goals

The number of conservation planning tools and approaches is a growing and dynamic field of research. Here, we present description and evaluation of 21 conservation planning tools. To reduce the complexity of the conservation planning tools we decided to take a functional-grouping approach. These six groups are: reserve planning, habitat connectivity, species distribution modeling and viability, planning process integration, threats and climate change. To do the review, we used our own knowledge of conservation planning software and approaches, surveyed the literature for references to published programs, and searched the internet for emerging programs. We have condensed this information into a table (Table 1) and used it as a springboard for further exploration and discussion.

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Q3 2013 Progress Report

Progress Report Q3, 2013

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The Northern Appalachian/Acadian Ecoregion: Priority Locations for Conservation Action

The Northern Appalachian/Acadian Ecoregion: Priority Locations for Conservation Action

This report describes the results of a research initiative launched by 2C1Forest to identify irreplaceable and vulnerable locations in the Northern Appalachian/Acadian ecoregion for the purpose of identifying priority locations for conservation action. Our methodology is data driven, comprehensive across the entire ecoregion, and spatially explicit at a high resolution, which allows our results to be replicated and applied at numerous spatial scales. Our approach to identifying priority locations involved three interlocking lines of analysis.

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Conserving the World’s Last Great Forest Is Possible: Here’s How

Conserving the World’s Last Great Forest Is Possible: Here’s How

A science/policy briefing note issued under the auspices of the International Boreal Conservation Science Panel and Associates.

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Use of Population Viability Analysis and Reserve Selection Algorithms in Regional Conservation Plans

Use of Population Viability Analysis and Reserve Selection Algorithms in Regional Conservation Plans

Current reserve selection algorithms have difficulty evaluating connectivity and other factors necessary to conserve wide-ranging species in developing landscapes. Conversely, population viability analyses may incorporate detailed demographic data, but often lack sufficient spatial detail or are limited to too few taxa to be relevant to regional conservation plans. We developed a regional conservation plan for mammalian carnivores in the Rocky Mountain region using both a reserve selection algorithm (SITES) and a spatially explicit population model (PATCH).

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Systematic Conservation Planning

Systematic Conservation Planning

The realization of conservation goals requires strategies for managing whole landscapes including areas allocated to both production and protection. Reserves alone are not adequate for nature conservation but they are the cornerstone on which regional strategies are built. Reserves have two main roles. They should sample or represent the biodiversity of each region and they should separate this biodiversity from processes that threaten its persistence. Existing reserve systems throughout the world contain a biased sample of biodiversity, usually that of remote places and other areas that are unsuitable for commercial activities. A more systematic approach to locating and designing reserves has been evolving and this approach will need to be implemented if a large proportion of today’s biodiversity is to exist in a future of increasing numbers of people and their demands on natural resources.

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