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This project integrates fire risk models, species distribution models (SDMs) and population models with scenarios of future climate and land cover to project how the effects of climate-induced changes to species distributions and land use change will impact threatened species in fire-prone ecosystems. This project also identifies and prioritizes potential management responses to climate change (e.g. assisted colonization, fire management, land protection, dispersal corridors). Anticipated products include: 1) maps (digital and hard copy) of habitat suitability under current and future climate change, current and future projected urban growth and combinations of climate change and future projected urban growth, under...
Categories: Data,
Project;
Tags: 2011,
Academics & scientific researchers,
CA,
CA-Southern,
California Landscape Conservation Cooperative, All tags...
Conservation NGOs,
Conservation Plan/Design/Framework,
Conservation Planning,
Conservation planning,
Decision Support,
Decision support,
Federal,
LCC,
LCC Network Science Catalog,
Map,
Population & Habitat Evaluation/Projection,
Population and Habitat Evaluation/Projection,
Project,
Regional & county planners,
Science Project,
Southern California,
Southwest CSC,
adaptation,
assisted colonization,
assisted colonization,
completed,
corridor,
data basin,
decision support,
environment,
fire,
listed,
management,
map,
moisture,
mscp,
multiple,
multiple,
population model,
risk model,
sdm,
sleuth model,
species distribution model,
threatened,
translocation,
urban,
vulnerability, Fewer tags
Perennial streams in the Desert LCC support riparian trees such as cottonwood (Populus spp) and box elder (Acer negundo) that are critical components of habitat for riparian obligate birds and other wildlife species (Webb et al. 2007). Trees, snags, and fallen woody debris provide nesting and foraging sites for a variety of riparian animals (Bateman et al. 2008, Smith et al. 2012). Riparian trees require occasional floods to create space suitable for germination and are dependent on accessible groundwater for growth and survival (Lytle and Merritt 2004). Studies along the Middle Rio Grande in New Mexico have shown that rates of woody debris accumulation are also influenced by hydrology because floods physically...
Categories: Data,
Project;
Types: Map Service,
OGC WFS Layer,
OGC WMS Layer,
OGC WMS Service;
Tags: 2012,
Acer negundo,
Applications and Tools,
Decision Support,
Desert Landscape Conservation Cooperative, All tags...
EARTH SCIENCE > BIOSPHERE > VEGETATION > FOREST COMPOSITION/VEGETATION STRUCTURE,
Federal resource managers,
LCC,
LCC Network Science Catalog,
Middle Rio Grande,
NM-01,
NM-02,
NM-03,
New Mexico,
Population & Habitat Evaluation/Projection,
Populus spp,
Project,
Publication,
R,
Training/Outreach/Workshop,
United States,
Vulnerability Assessment,
biota,
boxelder,
completed,
cottonwood,
debris,
fire,
population model,
riparian,
riparian obligates,
vegetation,
vulnerability,
watershed management,
wildlife,
woody vegetation, Fewer tags
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