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Assessing Southwest Resources, Future Climate Scenarios, and Possible Adaptation Actions to Support Conservation Planning

Desert Landscape Conservation Cooperative Landscape Conservation Planning and Design

Dates

Start Date
2016-09-15
End Date
2018-09-14
Release Date
2016

Summary

Changes in temperature and precipitation due to climate change (and associated droughts, wildfires, extreme storms etc.) threaten important water sources, forests, wildlife habitat, and ecosystems across the Southwest and throughout the entire U.S. These threats cross political and man-made boundaries and therefore need to be addressed at larger landscape-level and regional scales. “Landscape conservation design” is one method that can be used by land and resource managers to support large scale conservation and ensure that small scale and local actions contribute to a landscape level vision. The Desert Landscape Conservation Cooperative (LCC) is working to develop a shared vision for conservation action in the Southwest through a [...]

Child Items (3)

Contacts

Principal Investigator :
Matt Grabau
Co-Investigator :
Maureen Correll
Funding Agency :
Southwest CSC
CMS Group :
Climate Adaptation Science Centers (CASC) Program

Attached Files

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SonoranDesert_AlanCressler.jpg
“Sonoran Desert - Credit: Alan Cressler”
thumbnail 289 KB image/jpeg

Purpose

The overarching goal of the full landscape conservation design is to support large scale conservation by developing a shared vision for conservation action through a collaborative process to identify shared conservation goals, indicators, stressors and vulnerabilities, and potential management responses that create resilient ecosystems under changing climatic conditions. The proposed tasks will leverage existing funding to: 1) produce spatially explicit data and information about focal resources, chosen by the Desert LCC members; 2) Integrate Rapid Ecoregional Assessment data and products into a larger conservation design; 3) create scenarios that include the effects of climate change and other landscape stressors on focal resources; 4) integrate social and economic information in scenarios; and 5) develop collaborative adaptation responses that are useful and implementable by partners. In working with the Southwest Climate Science Center to complete the tasks, the Desert LCC will be responsible for hosting initial workshops that incorporate existing information and ideas into a current assessment of resource conditions, facilitating broad stakeholder participation in pilot areas, facilitating working group meetings, and managing data. The Southwest Climate Science Center will provide assistance and guidance for creating a collaborative process that results in development of future scenarios that feed into the overall LCPD effort.

Project Extension

projectStatusCompleted

Sonoran Desert - Credit: Alan Cressler
Sonoran Desert - Credit: Alan Cressler

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Southwest CASC

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