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Creating Practitioner‐Driven, Science‐Based Plans for Connectivity Conservation in the Washington-British Columbia Transboundary Region

Creating Practitioner-driven, Science-based Plans for Connectivity Conservation in a Changing Climate: A Collaborative Assessment of Climate-Connectivity Needs in the Washington-British Columbia Transboundary Region
Principal Investigator
Meade Krosby

Dates

Start Date
2014-07-01
End Date
2016-03-31
Release Date
2014

Summary

Enhancing ecological connectivity - the degree to which landscapes facilitate the movement of the organisms within them - is a frequently recommended strategy for conserving wildlife populations into the future. This is because a primary way in which species respond to climate change is by adjusting their geographic ranges to find more suitable temperatures and adequate food supplies. It is also because connectivity facilitates many other important ecological and evolutionary processes within species' ranges, further promoting resilience and healthy populations. However, widespread fragmentation of landscapes by human activities presents a serious obstacle to these processes, which may contribute to a decline in biodiversity, and subsequent [...]

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Contacts

Attached Files

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NW-2014-4_MtBaker_WA_AlanCressler.jpg
“Mount Baker, WA - Credit: Alan Cressler”
thumbnail 4.63 MB image/jpeg

Purpose

When the Earth experiences changes in its climate, wildlife respond by moving – species adjust their ranges to track changes in climate, moving out of areas that become too hot or otherwise inhospitable, and moving into areas that become newly hospitable. However, climate change is now proceeding so quickly that it is becoming difficult for species to move fast enough to keep pace. In addition, today’s landscapes feature significant barriers to movement presented by human land uses (e.g., roads, cities, farms). Such is the case in the region around the border of Washington and British Columbia, where increasing development pressure and limited coordination of land and wildlife management across the border pose a threat to the future ability of wildlife to move as the climate changes. The Washington-British Columbia Transboundary Climate-Connectivity Project sought to address this problem by building the capacity of land and wildlife managers in the transboundary region to incorporate climate change and wildlife movement into their decision-making. The project paired climate scientists with land and wildlife managers from both sides of the border to work together to anticipate how climate change may impact wildlife movement and identify actions for addressing these impacts, so that their management of the landscape and the wildlife within it would be better prepared for future change. Products are freely available via an online tool that allows users to view and download reports, maps, and other project products describing potential climate impacts and management responses for a diverse group of plants and animals living in the transboundary region. Together, this effort and its products have enhanced the ability of land and wildlife managers in Washington and British Columbia to collaboratively respond to future threats to regional wildlife movement, enhancing the resilience of our shared species and ecosystems.

Project Extension

parts
typeGrant Award Number
valueG14AP00096
projectStatusCompleted

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2014
totalFunds145343.0
year2015
totalFunds52773.0
totalFunds198116.0

Mount Baker, WA - Credit: Alan Cressler
Mount Baker, WA - Credit: Alan Cressler

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

Tags

Provenance

rfpManager-1.93

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
RegistrationUUID NCCWSC fb9b19b7-e3ad-4bdb-bb02-12546ddb75e5
StampID NCCWSC NW13-KM1205

Expando Extension

object
agendas
themes
number1
nameClimate Science & Modeling
options
number2
nameResponse of Physical Systems to Climate Change
options
number3
nameResponse of Biological Systems to Climate Change
options
btrue
number4
nameVulnerability and Adaptation
options
atrue
btrue
etrue
number5
nameMonitoring and Observation Systems
options
number6
nameData, Infrastructure, Analysis, and Modeling
options
ctrue
number7
nameCommunication of Science Findings
options
btrue
nameNorthwest CSC Agenda
urlhttp://www.doi.gov/csc/northwest/upload/NW-CSC-Science-Agenda-2012-2015.pdf

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