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An Ecosystem Conservation Assessment for the lower San Pedro Watershed in Arizona

Dates

Creation
2014-03-14 20:27:40
Last Update
2017-09-07 16:02:01
Start Date
2013-06-15
End Date
2014-07-01
Start Date
2013-06-15 05:00:00
End Date
2014-07-01 05:00:00

Citation

LCC Network Data Steward(Point of Contact), Desert Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), Scott Wilbor(Principal Investigator), Lower San Pedro Watershed Alliance(Cooperator/Partner), Salt River Project(Cooperator/Partner), San Pedro Natural Resource Conservation Districts (Redington and Winkelman)(Cooperator/Partner), The Nature Conservancy(Cooperator/Partner), US FWS - National Refuges Program(Cooperator/Partner), 2014-03-14(creation), 2017-09-07(lastUpdate), 2013-06-15(Start), 2014-07-01(End), An Ecosystem Conservation Assessment for the lower San Pedro Watershed in Arizona, https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/5323663ce4b07f555751f5f4

Summary

University of Arizona will conduct an ecosystem conservation assessment for the lower San Pedro (LSP) watershed. The assessment will provide a science-based strategic design for prioritizing where conservation efforts are most needed for high-value biodiversity conservation at the landscape-level and offer insights on conservation actions practical for implementation. The assessment will include an evaluation of high-value biodiversity, hydro-ecological processes, protected areas, landscape connectivity, and climate change adaptation. The study will suggest approaches for developing a new conservation framework for watershed conservation planning.

Child Items (1)

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

md_metadata.json 139.49 KB application/json
Proposal_FWS_F13AS00164_FY13.pdf 74.62 KB application/pdf
Support_FWS_F13AS00164_FY13.pdf 74.37 KB application/pdf

Purpose

This study will achieve an ecosystem conservation assessment for the lower San Pedro (LSP) watershed. The assessment will provide a science-based strategic design for prioritizing where conservation efforts are most needed for high-value biodiversity conservation at the landscape level and offer insights on conservation actions practical for implementation. The assessment will include an evaluation of high-value biodiversity, hydro-ecological processes, protected areas, landscape connectivity, and climate change adaptation. The study will suggest approaches for developing a new conservation framework for watershed conservation planning.

Project Extension

projectProducts
productDescriptionReport
statusDelivered
productDescriptionLandscape-level ecosystem conservation design
statusDelivered
projectStatusCompleted

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2013
fundingSources
amount32116.0
recipientUniversity of Arizona
sourceU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
totalFunds32116.0
year2013
fundingSources
amount5000.0
recipientUniversity of Arizona
sourceSalt River Project
matchingtrue
totalFunds5000.0
totalFunds37116.0

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
Cooperative Agreement FWS F13AC00566

Expando Extension


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