RSS Latest Content Added to the NALCC
- Climate Change Threatens North America's Freshwater Mussels -- USGS
- New research overseen by the U.S. Geological Survey shows that juvenile mussels have difficulty surviving in higher water temperatures that may happen more frequently in North America's rivers and lakes as the planet warms.
- NWF releases 3 new reports on Safeguarding Wildlife in an Era of Climate Change
- Three reports by NWF summarize information on impacts to wildlife and their habitats in that state including the results of vulnerability and/or sensitivity assessments conducted as part of this project. These assessment are then used to identify management concerns and implications as well as, for New York, adaptation strategies for the state.
- New Report Reveals Continuing Coastal Wetlands Losses in U.S.
- The United States is losing wetlands in coastal watersheds at a significant rate, according to a new report released by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
- A Landscape-Scale Approach to Refuge Planning
- The report examines how Refuge System planning will address large-scale conservation challenges such as climate change, while maintaining the integrity of management and conservation delivery within refuge boundaries.
- Appalachian LCC Newsletters
- A quarterly newsletter from the Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative that touches on recent achievements, funded projects, building the cooperative, and more.
- Northeast Climate Science Center Newsletter
- News and upcoming events related to the Northeast Climate Science Center
- South Atlantic LCC Newsletter
- The South Atlantic LCC's monthly newsletter.
- New England Wild Flower Society
- New England Wild Flower Society is dedicated to conserving and promoting the region’s native plants to ensure healthy, biologically diverse landscapes. Founded in 1900, the Society is the nation’s oldest plant conservation organization and a recognized leader in native plant conservation, horticulture, and education. The Society’s headquarters, Garden in the Woods, is a renowned native plant botanic garden in Framingham, Massachusetts, that attracts visitors from all over the world. From this base, 25 staff and more than 700 volunteers work throughout New England to monitor and protect rare and endangered plants, collect and preserve seeds to ensure biological diversity, detect and control invasive species, conduct research, and offer a range of educational programs. The Society also operates a native plant nursery at Nasami Farm in western Massachusetts and has seven sanctuaries in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont that are open to the public.
- NALCC Steering Committee Endorses Key Next Steps
- Regional partners chart course for developing, integrating, delivering, and communicating science toward a common goal of sustainable landscapes.
- Presentation: Science Delivery
- Science Delivery presentation
- Presentation: LCC way forward
- Presentation: LCC way forward
- Presentation -- Landscape conservation design in the LCC
- Landscape conservation design in the LCC
- Presentation: Review of progress
- Presentation on Northeast framework and NALCC progress
- Handout 5
- Landscape Conservation Design in the North Atlantic LCC – Key Points & Questions
- Handout 2
- Steering Committee Meeting November 5-6, 2013 - Expected Attendees
- Handout 12
- Status of Approved and Remaining North Atlantic LCC Priority Science Needs for 2013
- News Archive
- Round up of news and events from the North Atlantic LCC, as well as other news of note in the conservation community.
- Handout 7
- Recommendations for science delivery funding
- Handout 8
- Summary of RCN Synthesis products
- Handout 18
- Hurricane Sandy table of DOI science projects
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