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Folders: ROOT > ScienceBase Catalog > LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal > North Pacific Landscape Conservation Cooperative > NPLCC Projects > FY2016 ( Show all descendants )

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_ScienceBase Catalog
__LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal
___North Pacific Landscape Conservation Cooperative
____NPLCC Projects
_____FY2016
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Building on currently available resources and on the prior climate adaptation experiences of our team,which includes tribal staff and a cultural anthropologist who is also an enrolled member of theConfederated Tribes of Siletz Indians, we will co-develop a guidebook for tribal adaptation. Thisguidebook will bring a tribal focus to adaptation planning and building resilience, in the context ofexisting tribal priorities, and will include traditional and local knowledge as well as western scientificresources and tools. Under the direction of an advisory group, the guidebook will be road-tested withseveral tribes, two of which have already been identified, and then revised at least once before beingreleased.
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The State of Alaska has more coastline than the rest of the United Statescombined and extends from the high Arctic to the temperate rainforests and marine waters of Southeast Alaska. Climate change impacts are unique in the Southeast Alaska region and are longer term impacts such as heavy rains causing flooding, ocean acidification, warmer waters, snowfall variations, warm springs followed by frost affecting wild berry production, invasive species, and toxins in the marine environment. These factors impact food security and culturally important resources. This project will provide a summit for Southeast Alaska tribal environmentalcoordinators and other stakeholders tosupport natural and cultural resource conservation...
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This project, with funding support by the North Pacific Landscape Conservation Cooperative andpartners, will address the need to better understand the impact that climate change will have on oursalmon subsistence resources in southeast Alaska. Working with federal and state agencies, as well ascommunity-based organizations and tribal governments, this project will 1) build a network that supportslocal organizations in their efforts to collect stream temperature data, and 2) coordinate those efforts sothat the data will inform and empower management agencies, researchers, and communities to adapt tochanging conditions for fish in the freshwater stages of their lifecycles.
Pacific Birds Habitat Joint Venture and the North Pacific Landscape Conservation Cooperative have collaborated to identify and describe the state of conservation targets in the Pacific Coast Ecoregion in support of the Pacific Northwest Coast Conservation Blueprint (Landscape Conservation Design (LCD) project. This document presents a description of the primary ecological systems of the Pacific Coastal Ecoregion and recommends a framework for further LCD assessment and analysis. Within this document, 7 ecological systems are identified as common conservation targets among the entities engaged in the LCD partnership. This includes coastal forest, sandy beaches and coastal dunes, rocky shores and cliff, freshwater...
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A social network analysis maps out the who, what, and where of conservation collaboration, helping us to think more strategically about conservation at the landscape scale by identifying who entities collaborate with, and the conservation priorities, strategies, capacity needs, strengths, and geographic areas of interest.For more information on the larger Pacific Northwest Coast Landscape Conservation Design project that the Social Network Analysis is a part of please see the project website: http://columbiacoastblueprint.org/
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The Jamestown SKlallam and Port Gamble SKlallam tribes, and many other tribes in the PacificNorthwest, rely on ESA listed fish species for subsistence as well as cultural and economic practices.Concern has grown over the impacts climate change might have throughout the 21st Century ontraditional fishing areas. We will employ well validated hydrological numerical modeling methodologiesto project streamflow changes in five major fish-bearing streams and their tributaries in the NorthwestOlympic Peninsula in Washington State. Results from this study will be made available to tribal leadersand natural resource managers for planning purposes and to assess potential freshwater habitatvulnerability under a variety of plausible...
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The BC Ministry of FLNRO will inventory and review all available climate change research, adaptation plans, vulnerability assessments and climate mitigation projects that have been initiated by First Nation communities throughout British Columbia, beginning with the Coast Area. The purpose is to build a better understanding and awareness of the climate change impacts and vulnerabilities identified by First Nation communities throughout the Province of British Columbia. This information will provide provincial natural resource managers with foundational information and data to support their conversations and engagement with First Nations in relation to climate change adaptation and mitigation planning.
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Practitioners struggle with how to identify, prioritize, and implement climate adaptation actions that can effectively reduce vulnerability; these decisions may be more easily made and successfully implemented if they are informed by scientific evidence. EcoAdapt, the Institute for Natural Resources, and the Northwest Climate Science Center have partnered on the Available Science Assessment Project (ASAP) to synthesize and evaluate scientific knowledge on specific adaptation actions to determine the implementation conditions under which these actions may be most effective; we are examining the science behind sea level rise adaptation actions in the Northwest. We will convene managers and scientists at in-person...


    map background search result map search result map Furthering adaptation coordination and planning for species and ecosystems in the transboundary Cascadia landscape, and assessing contribution of eDNA to monitoring priority species The Available Science Assessment Project: Evaluating Adaptation Actions for Sea Level Rise and Coastal Change Modeling the Effects of Climate Change on Fish-bearing Streams in Western Washington Understanding British Columbia First Nations Engagement in Climate Change Southeast Alaska Climate Change Summit Developing a Southeast Alaska community-based stream temperature monitoring network Developing resilience to natural and cultural dimensions of climate change: Tribal perspectives and applications
the transboundary Cascadia landscape, and assessing contribution of eDNA to monitoring
priority species Social Network Analysis Developing resilience to natural and cultural dimensions of climate change: Tribal perspectives and applications
the transboundary Cascadia landscape, and assessing contribution of eDNA to monitoring
priority species Southeast Alaska Climate Change Summit Developing a Southeast Alaska community-based stream temperature monitoring network Modeling the Effects of Climate Change on Fish-bearing Streams in Western Washington Furthering adaptation coordination and planning for species and ecosystems in the transboundary Cascadia landscape, and assessing contribution of eDNA to monitoring priority species Social Network Analysis The Available Science Assessment Project: Evaluating Adaptation Actions for Sea Level Rise and Coastal Change Understanding British Columbia First Nations Engagement in Climate Change