Return to Wildland Fire
Return to Northern Bobwhite site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to SE Firemap
Return to the Landscape Partnership Literature Gateway Website
return
return to main site

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections

Personal tools

You are here: Home / Expertise Search / Brennan, Jean
380 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type
























New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Kentucky Water Science Center (KY WSC)
Located in Cooperative / Our Plan / Section 2: Science Capacity within the Appalachian Community Federal Departments/Agencies
Key Findings & Management Recommendations
The Appalachian LCC-funded study is the first region-wide assessment to document “flow-ecology” relationships – showing connections between observed impacts under current water withdrawal standards (based on daily water gauge data collected over the last 15 years and fish surveys) and the decline in freshwater fish communities.
Located in Research / Funded Projects / Stream Impacts from Water Withdrawals in the Marcellus Shale Region
Land Use in the Appalachians
Located in Cooperative / Our Plan / Section 1: Biodiversity and Conservation Challenges Across the Appalachian Region
File ECMAScript program Landscape-scale conservation design across biotic realms: sequential integration of aquatic and terrestrial landscapes.
2017. Scientific Reports Related to this Collaboration with Clemson University. Paul B. Leonard, Robert F. Baldwin & R. Daniel Hanks.
Located in Research / / Interactive Conservation Planning for the Appalachian LCC: Appalachian NatureScape / Scientific Reports Related to Collaboration with Clemson University
File ECMAScript program Landscape-scale conservation design across biotic realms - sequential integration of aquatic and terrestrial landscapes
Systematic conservation planning has been used extensively throughout the world to identify important areas for maintaining biodiversity and functional ecosystems, and is well suited to address large-scale biodiversity conservation challenges of the twenty-first century. Systematic planning is necessary to bridge implementation, scale, and data gaps in a collaborative effort that recognizes competing land uses. Here, we developed a conservation planning process to identify and unify conservation priorities around the central and southern Appalachian Mountains as part of the Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative (App LCC). Through a participatory framework and sequential, cross-realm integration in spatial optimization modeling we highlight lands and waters that together achieve joint conservation goals from LCC partners for the least cost. This process was driven by a synthesis of 26 multi-scaled conservation targets and optimized for simultaneous representation inside the program Marxan to account for roughly 25% of the LCC geography. We identify five conservation design elements covering critical ecological processes and patterns including interconnected regions as well as the broad landscapes between them. Elements were then subjected to a cumulative threats index for possible prioritization. The evaluation of these elements supports.
Located in Our Community / Workshops
File Landscape-scale conservation design across biotic realms - sequential integration of aquatic and terrestrial landscapes
Systematic conservation planning has been used extensively throughout the world to identify important areas for maintaining biodiversity and functional ecosystems, and is well suited to address large-scale biodiversity conservation challenges of the twenty-first century. Systematic planning is necessary to bridge implementation, scale, and data gaps in a collaborative effort that recognizes competing land uses. Here, we developed a conservation planning process to identify and unify conservation priorities around the central and southern Appalachian Mountains as part of the Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative (App LCC). Through a participatory framework and sequential, cross-realm integration in spatial optimization modeling we highlight lands and waters that together achieve joint conservation goals from LCC partners for the least cost. This process was driven by a synthesis of 26 multi-scaled conservation targets and optimized for simultaneous representation inside the program Marxan to account for roughly 25% of the LCC geography. We identify five conservation design elements covering critical ecological processes and patterns including interconnected regions as well as the broad landscapes between them. Elements were then subjected to a cumulative threats index for possible prioritization. The evaluation of these elements supports
Located in Our Community / Workshops
LCC Coordinators Lessons Learned
This is a work group to capture the "lessons learned" from the 5-8 year life span of the DOI LCCs.
Located in Our Community
File LCC Fact Sheet - Northeast Region
General LCC Fact Sheet prepared by the FWS Northeast Regional Office.
Located in SC Communications Work Group / Resources / Communication-related Content
File application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.presentationml.presentation LCC ideas.pptx
slides Yvette put together in Denver - the purpose of that was to help us organize our thoughts at that meeting and to help understand some context of where we've been to examine where we are going. It was not vetted so please keep in mind ...but it if helps jog some thinking, great.
Located in Our Community / Lessons Learned Resource Folder
File text/texmacs LCC Member Organizations - Vision & Mission Statements
From Steering Committee Membership representation. File distributed to ISC members at the July 2012 (Work Plan) Workshop.
Located in Cooperative / / SC Meeting & Workshop, April 22-24, 2013 / SC Programmatic Alignment Work Group