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Marshes on the Move provides modeling guidance for resource managers and planners, describing the parameters and issues involved in using wetland migration models that depict the possible responses of coastal wetlands to sea level rise. This work is a collaborative effort between the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and The Nature Conservancy.
This report presents an overview of the Farming for Wildlife project and its progress as of October 2011. It includes Farming for Wildlife project goals and objectives and a project timeline. The Farming for Wildlife project is building a model for sustainable wetland rotations and long term soil stewardship.
In 2004 and 2005, The Nature Conservancy initiated mapping and characterization of estuarine habitats within and around the Port Susan Bay preserve. This report highlights this work. The project was an effort to inform TNC’s conservation efforts, establish a baseline prior to restoration actions, and determine a long-term estuary monitoring program.
This paper synthesizes information from presentations and discussions that occurred as part of a two-day workshop. The workshop was the second annual meeting of the Pacific Northwest Forest Restoration Learning Network and emphasized planning and prioritization of road management treatments, public/private/tribal partnerships, and specific strategies to improve effectiveness of road upgrading and decommissioning projects.
Ellsworth Creek Preserve is being used by The Nature Conservancy to test impacts of three different restoration treatments on eight experimental sub-basins within the watershed. This suite of GIS data is part of the baseline monitoring (data collected prior to treatment) of that experiment and includes information on surveys of migratory forest birds, stream-associated amphibians, stream physical habitat, and forest structure and vegetation.
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