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This insert into the February 2013 Estuary news offers snapshots of how seven CA LCC projects have been laying the foundations for lasting cooperative conservation partnerships.
The CA LCC and CA Department of Water Resources partnered to host a TEK training for natural resource managers and scientists. The aim was to foster ability to partner with tribes and understand traditional knowledge of the environment.
This two and a half day workshop offered five sessions organized around a change adaptation framework. Each session was designed to be a shared learning process that would both test the framework as a tool and help the participants learn how they might use it in their workplaces. Sessions had a combination of speakers and group exercises. The workshop brought together nearly 170 individuals from more than 60 organizations to identify shared conservation goals and to explore regional scale strategies to conserve Southern Sierra Nevada natural resources in the face of rapid change and an uncertain future.Public land managers and partners in the Southern Sierra Nevada Region are keenly aware that valued resources are...
Project GoalThe Goal of the Central Valley Landscape Conservation Project is to identify climate-smart conservation actions in partnership with scientists and natural resource managers that will maximize the adaptive capacity of priority species, habitats, and ecosystems to support an ecologically connected Central Valley landscape.Project ObjectivesConserve resilient and adaptable ecosystems that sustain future Central Valley biodiversity.Promote landscape-scale connectivity and ecological and physical processes that function within current and future ranges of variability to support a diverse and thriving Central Valley.Reduce the impacts of climate change and other co-occurring stressors to Central Valley ecosystems....
Guidance for incorporating climate change into conservation and restoration strategies was provided in two Climate-Smart Actions for Natural Resource Managers workshops hosted by the Bay Area Ecosystem Climate Change Consortium (BAECCC, baeccc.org) and sponsored by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the California Landscape Conservation Cooperative, California Coastal Conservancy, and The Nature Conservancy on November 29, 2012 and September 24, 2013. Materials from both of these workshops are presented in this webpage, presented on the CA LCC’s Climate Commons.
This section of the Climate Commons is dedicated to web pages and data management plans for the CA LCC-funded projects. The purpose is to deliver the scientific products resulting from the CA LCC-funded applied research projects for use by the intended audience, California’s natural resource managers. The project pages provide access to the many types of products, including online tools, publications, and datasetsData management plans are required of every project at the begininng of the project, and CA LCC’s Data Managers work with the Principle Investigators to fill out the data management plans and eventually catalog and present their results in the Climate Commons through these web pages. Often the PI works...
A collection of information resources assembled to support the CVLCP partnership efforts, including scenario planning, assessing vulnerabilities, and developing adaptation strategies.
Assessing vulnerabilities is a critical step in climate–smart conservation planning. The Central Valley Landscape Conservation Project (CVLCP) participants evaluated the vulnerability of a group of selected priority natural resources by discussing and answering a series of questions for sensitivity, exposure, and adaptive capacity at a workshop held in October of 2015. The vulnerability scores presented in this summary were calculated based on the expertise of the CVLCP participants and are accompanied by a comprehensive literature review (for more details visit http://climate.calcommons.org/cvlcp). These assessments were conducted as a step toward the Central Valley Landscape Conservation Project’s goal of a coordinated,...
These Central Valley habitats, species groups, and species reflect a collective set of priorities and will be the focus of vulnerability assessments and adaptation strategies and actions
On March 3, 2015, The California Landscape Conservation Cooperative conducted a scenario planning workshop as a part of the Central Valley Landscape Conservation Project (CVLCP). The goal of this scenario planning exercise was to develop a common understanding of a range of future conditions in the Central Valley as a basis for identifying priority natural resources and adaptation strategies and actions.Workshop participants worked in small groups to develop two major axes of landscapeMscale change in the Central Valley that would then be used to develop four plausible future scenarios for the Central Valley. All groups agreed on a water-related axis, and there were two distinct versions of a human-driven axis....
This webpage, document, and bibliography provides a summary of projected future changes in the California Central Valley according to current models and assessments. Information is provided for Temperature, Extreme Heat, Precipitation, Drought and Aridity, Sierra Nevada Snowpack, Snowmelt, Runoff, Stream Flow and Temperatures, Storms and Flooding, Groundwater, Agriculture and Urban Land and Water Use, Phenology, Fire, Vegetation change.
This insert into the March 2014 Estuary news offers snapshots of how seven CA LCC projects have been laying the foundations for lasting cooperative conservation partnerships. The CA LCC has been striving to ensure that its projects complete research and make it accessible to resource managers – through publications, maps, the Climate Commons web site, workshops, webinars, and more. The CA LCC also completed a five-year strategic plan and science management framework in 2013.