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Manomet: Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment for Shorebird
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The Climate Change Vulnerability
Assessment for Shorebird Habitat (CCVASH)
is an innovative, Excel-based
assessment and decision-making tool that
was developed during 2009/2010 by the
Manomet Center for Conservation Sciences's
Shorebird Recovery Project [4] in partnership
with the United States Fish and Wildlife
Service (USFWS [5]) Northeast Region’s
Division of Refuges. This partnership, funded
in large part by the generosity of individual
Manomet donors concerned about climate change impacts on shorebirds, enabled Refuge
Biologist Dorie Stolley to develop and pilot the tool during a one-year assignment to
Manomet.
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Management Tools: Ecosystems
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Coastal
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Coastal: Vunerability Assessment - Shorebird Habitat
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Instructions Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment for Shorebird Habitat. Coastal Version. 7/03/2010
Manomet Center for Conservation Sciences/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. By Dorie Stolley
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Management Tools: Ecosystems
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Coastal
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Site Assessment Tool
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The Site Assessment Tool (.xls, 499KB) enables WSHRN sites to systematically review their state
of conservation, the threats they are facing, the responses needed and the effectiveness of site
management. The results of the assessments will lead to priority setting and strategic actions for
WHSRN to respond effectively to the main needs and issues of the network, with the ultimate goal of
conserving healthy shorebird populations. (print of web page)
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Management Tools: Ecosystems
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Coastal
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USFS: Climate Resources for Land Managers
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Management Tools: Ecosystems
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Forest
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DU: Confronting the Challenges of Climate Change for Waterfowl and Wetlands
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Browne, Dawn M. and Dale D. Humburg. 2010. Confronting the Challenges of Climate Change for
Waterfowl and Wetlands. Ducks Unlimited, Inc. Memphis, TN.
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Management Tools: Ecosystems
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Wetlands
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FL: Addressing the Challenge of Climate Change in the Greater Everglades Landscape
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“Addressing the Challenge of Climate Change in the Greater Everglades
Landscape” is a research initiative funded by the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
and carried out by a group of researchers at the Department of Urban
Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT).
The study investigates possible trajectories of future transformation
in the Greater Everglades Landscape relative to four main drivers:
climate change, shifts in planning approaches and regulations,
population change, and variations in financial resources. Through
a systematic exploration at the landscape-scale, this research identifies
some of the major challenges to future conservation efforts
and illustrates a planning method which can generate conservation
strategies resilient to a variety of climatic and socioeconomic
conditions.
Located in
Adaptation
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Adaptation Working Folder
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Management Tools: Landscape-level Modeling
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NE CSC Website
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Located in
Adaptation
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Climate Adaptation Science Working Folder
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DOI Climate Science Centers
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NASA: Science
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Main Index Page
Located in
Adaptation
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Climate Adaptation Science Working Folder
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NE CSC Website
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Located in
Resources
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Climate Links
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NASA: Earth-to-Sky
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Located in
Resources
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Climate Links