California - one of the nation's most populous states - hosts extensive public lands, crown-jewel national parks, and diverse natural resources. Resource managers in federal, state, tribal, and local agencies face challenges due to environmental changes and extreme events such as severe droughts, heat waves, flood events, massive wildfires, and forest dieback. However, state-of-the-art research that could aid in the management of natural resources facing these challenges is typically slow to be applied, owing to limited time and capacity on the part of both researchers and managers. This project aims to accelerate the application of science to resource management by facilitating the translation and synthesis of research to relevant [...]
Summary
California - one of the nation's most populous states - hosts extensive public lands, crown-jewel national parks, and diverse natural resources. Resource managers in federal, state, tribal, and local agencies face challenges due to environmental changes and extreme events such as severe droughts, heat waves, flood events, massive wildfires, and forest dieback. However, state-of-the-art research that could aid in the management of natural resources facing these challenges is typically slow to be applied, owing to limited time and capacity on the part of both researchers and managers.
This project aims to accelerate the application of science to resource management by facilitating the translation and synthesis of research to relevant and often urgent management issues. The project researchers will implement a number of specific activities, ranging from the organization of science-manager working groups and other in–person events (field demonstrations, trainings, workshops, etc.) to webinars, digital dissemination of research syntheses, fact sheets and non-technical briefs that are designed to be easily accessible by managers and the public. The focus will be forest management, but may extend beyond to cover other critical resources, as needed. The project will involve coordination and collaboration with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, California Department of Fish and Wildlife, California Department of Water Resources, USDA Forest Service, and tribes across the state to deliver up-to-date research findings to facilitate the conservation and management planning efforts of resource managers across California.
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BodieMtnWildernessStudyArea_CA_BobWick_BLM.jpg “Bodie Mountain Wilderness Study Area, CA, Bob Wick - Credit”
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Project Extension
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type
Technical Summary
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California, one of the nation's most populous states, hosts extensive public lands, crown-jewel national parks, and diverse natural resources. Resource managers in federal, state, tribal, and local agencies face challenges of ongoing environmental change, punctuated by severe droughts, heat waves, flood events, massive wildfires, and forest dieback. Application of state-of-the-art research to management of natural resources is typically slow owing to limited time and capacity on the part of both researchers and managers. This project addresses the gap by embedding an early-career research scientist with leading Southwest Climate Adaptation Science Center (SW CASC)-affiliated researchers and boundary spanning specialists at UC-Davis to compile and synthesize relevant research findings. The scientist will coordinate and collaborate with SW CASC partners at U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), National Park Service (NPS), Bureau of Land Management (BLM), California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW), California Department of Water Resources (DWR), USDA Forest Service (FS), and tribes across the state to deliver up-to-date research findings to facilitate the conservation and management planning efforts of resource managers across California. The project aims to improve and accelerate the application of key research findings to pressing natural resource management issues.
projectStatus
Completed
Budget Extension
annualBudgets
year
2018
totalFunds
95833.76
parts
type
Award Type
value
Cooperative Agreement
type
Award Number
value
G19AC00128
totalFunds
95833.76
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Bodie Mountain Wilderness Study Area, CA, Bob Wick - Credit