You are here: Home

Search results

69 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type



















New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Image Troff document Hail Cove Living Shoreline Project
From aerial tour of Hail Cove, M.D.
Located in Topics / Marsh Resiliency / Photos and Images
File text/texmacs Hurricane Sandy Coastal Resiliency DOI Competitive Grants (NFWF)
Spreadsheet of Hurricane Sandy Coastal Resiliency DOI Competitive Grants from National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
Located in Projects / North Atlantic Hurricane Sandy Resiliency Science Projects
File text/texmacs Hurricane Sandy DOI Bureau and NOAA Science Projects List (pdf file)
A comprehensive list of DOI and NOAA Hurricane Sandy resiliency and restoration science projects, including those coordinated by the North Atlantic LCC (PDF). 294 pp.
Located in Projects / North Atlantic Hurricane Sandy Resiliency Science Projects
File Hurricane Sandy DOI Bureau and NOAA Science Projects Database (MS Access)
A comprehensive database of DOI Bureau and NOAA Hurricane Sandy resiliency and restoration science projects, including those coordinated by the North Atlantic LCC
Located in Projects / North Atlantic Hurricane Sandy Resiliency Science Projects
File text/texmacs Hurricane Sandy DOI Competitive Projects with Science Components
Spreadsheet of Hurricane Sandy DOI Competitive Projects with Science Components
Located in Projects / North Atlantic Hurricane Sandy Resiliency Science Projects
File PDF document Identification of potential beach-nesting bird habitat to be set aside in municipal beach management plans
Brooke Maslo. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Natural Resources, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.
Located in Projects / North Atlantic Hurricane Sandy Resiliency Science Projects / Increasing Resiliency of Beach Habitats and Species
Project Identifying Resilient Sites for Coastal Conservation
Sea levels are expected to rise by one to six feet over the next century, and coastal sites vary markedly in their ability to accommodate such inundation. In response to this threat, scientists from The Nature Conservancy evaluated 10,736 sites in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic for the size, configuration and adequacy of their migration space, and for the natural processes necessary to support the migration of coastal habitats in response to sea-level rise.
Located in Projects / North Atlantic Hurricane Sandy Resiliency Science Projects / TNCCoastal_Resilient Sites
Project ECMAScript program Increasing Resiliency of Beach Habitats and Species
This project is a coordinated effort by Landscape Conservation Cooperative (LCC) partners to integrate existing data, models and tools with foundational data and assessments of both the impacts of Hurricane Sandy and the immediate response. The project will integrate new and existing data and build decision support tools to guide beach restoration, management and conservation actions. Project objectives are to sustain ecological function, habitat suitability for wildlife, and ecosystem services including flood abatement in the face of storm impacts and sea level rise.
Located in Projects / North Atlantic Hurricane Sandy Resiliency Science Projects
File Pascal source code Introductory Slides - Goals of Workshop
Introductory Slides - Goals and Specific Objectives of Hurricane Sandy Marsh Resiliency Workshop
Located in Topics / / Presentation files / Mapping and Spatial Data (also Intro. slides)
Project iPlover: Piping plover habitat suitability in a changing climate
Designed by scientists to simplify consistent data collection and management, the iPlover smartphone application gives trained resource managers an easy-to-use platform where they can collect and share data about coastal habitat utilization across a diverse community of field technicians, scientists, and managers. With the click of a button, users can contribute biological and geomorphological data to regional models designed to forecast the habitat outlook for piping plover, and other species that depend upon sandy beach habitat.
Located in Projects / North Atlantic Hurricane Sandy Resiliency Science Projects / iPlover