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The CA LCC is a management-science partnership created to inform and promote integrated science, natural resource management and conservation to address impacts of climate change and other stressors within and across ecosystems.

Location: Big Sur, California

Change background to Big Sur Coastline Change background to Field of Poppies Change background to Sequoia National Forest Change background to California Delta at Sunset

Upcoming Events

Conservation meetings

The spring meeting of the Practitioners’ Network for Large Landscape Conservation is May 21, 2012 in Tucson, AZ. Topics include the latest policy developments in large landscape conservation and new tools and resources for working at the large landscape scale.

The meeting is one day before the two-day U.S. Institute for Environmental Conflict Resolution Conference at the same location. That conference will feature discussions on tribal consultation and collaborations at new and larger scales.
Tucson, AZ
May 22, 2012

For more information on the Practitioners’ meeting, visit
http://largelandscapenetwork.org/janda/ inner.php?PageID=95.
For more on the Environmental Conflict Resolution Conference, visit
http://www.ecr.gov/pdf/Conference/ ECRregBrochure20123-2-12latest.pdf.


10th Annual Headwaters to Oceans (H2O) Conference

The conference will cover a wide spectrum of coastal and ocean issues.
May 29-31, 2012
San Diego, CA


Southwest Climate Summit

A meeting of federal, tribal, state, and local stakeholders, resource managers, and scientists to discuss the state of climate science in the Southwest.
June 11-14, 2012
Tucson, AZ
www.doi.gov/csc/southwest/index.cfm


The Mediterranean City: A Conference on Climate Change Adaptation

This conference will initiate an ongoing collaboration of cities working to adapt to the impacts of climate change as they affect the five Mediterranean-climate regions of the world.
June 25-27, 2012
Los Angeles, CA
Medcityconference.org


The 4th International Conference on Climate Change

University of Washington
July 12-13, 2012
Seattle, WA


Society for Conservation Biology

North American Congress for Conservation Biology

Bridging the Gap: Connecting People, Nature & Climate
July 15-18, 2012
Oakland, CA


Feature Article


5/17/2012

Webinar examining the effects of climate change on rare plants available

A recorded webinar presented by Steve Schoenig, an environmental program manager with the California Department of Fish and Game, is now available.

The presentation, titled “Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment for Rare Plants,” is the first in a series of webinars highlighting CA LCC-supported projects. It was originally presented May 10.

Schoenig and his team recently completed an analysis of over 150 of the state’s rare plant species using the NatureServe Climate Change Vulnerability Index. The results identified which of California’s rare plant species may be most sensitive to climate change.

To view the webinar, visit https://mmancusa.webex.com/mmancusa/ldr.php?AT=pb&SP=MC&rID=46341372&rKey=498d8adf181ad2f5 (note: the webinar begins at the 11 minute mark on the recording).

To view the slide presentation, click here.

The next webinar in the series is noon, May 24 and will feature Nadav Nur, PRBO Conservation Science. His topic is “Vulnerability Analysis and Monitoring Program for Detecting Changes in San Francisco Bay Tidal Marsh Bird Populations Resulting from Climate Change.” To join the webinar, visit https://mmancusa.webex.com/mmancusa/j.php?ED=182645417&UID=0&PW=NOGU5NzAzZTlj&RT=MiM0.

If requested, enter your name and email address. If a password is required, enter the meeting password: californialcc and click “join.”

To join the teleconference, dial toll-free1-866-737-4154 Passcode: 2872670

If you have questions about the webinar, contact Rebecca Fris at 916-278-9415.



4/30/2012

CA LCC reviews projects to help natural resource managers

More than 90 pre-proposals were reviewed by the California Landscape Conservation Cooperative this month as the partnership began the process of selecting science projects to fund in 2012.

“What stood out in this set of proposals was the diversity,” says Rebecca Fris, CA LCC science coordinator. “There were proposals addressing fire issues and forest management and some that addressed marine and coastal issues. This is the first time we have seen that many from those areas, and I think it shows that more people understand what the CA LCC can do, how it adds value and how it can help support the type of science natural resource managers need.”

The CA LCC has from $500,000 to $800,000 this year to support the development of science-based tools and products that will help enhance the conservation efforts of natural resource managers throughout the state. Five to eight projects will be funded, and final awards will be announced in late June.



Results of CA LCC-funded projects for birds, fish presented at conference

Native birds flying in formation above a tidal marsh Emerson Parcel Tidal Marsh in California

Three CA LCC-funded projects were presented at the US Regional Association of the International Association for Landscape Ecology annual symposium in Newport, Rhode Island in April.

Nadav Nur, a quantitative ecologist with PRBO Conservation Science, presented “Population Modeling Tools to Achieve Long-term Viability of Tidal Marsh Birds in the Context of Climate Change.”

Rebecca M. Quiñones, a graduate student of Professor Peter Moyle at the University of California-Davis Center for Watershed Sciences, presented “The Effects of Climate Change on California’s Inland Fishes: Tools for Adaptation.”

Ryan Harrigan, a post-doctoral student of Professor Tom Smith at the UCLA Center for Tropical Research, presented "Maximizing Evolutionary Potential under Climate Change in Southern California Protected Areas."

Nur’s presentation highlights concerns over (more...)



CA LCC supports USGS workshop on fog

Fog rolls over a gray sand beach, montain peaks hover above the fog in the distance Fog off the California coast

More than 30 people attended a U.S. Geological Survey workshop on fog funded by the California Landscape Conservation Cooperative April 3-5.

The U.S. Geological Survey hosted natural resource managers and an international team of scientists in Menlo Park, CA, for the first Pacific Coastal Fog Workshop, which examined advective fog, a major modifier of climactic conditions along the California coast.

“The importance of fog to ecological communities on the coastline is significant because it not only provides moisture, but also affects the amount of sunlight received on the ground,” says Alicia Torregrosa, a physical scientist with the USGS Western Geographic Science Center in Menlo Park.

The workshop brought together (more...)



Job plan includes the Landscape Conservation Cooperatives

The Landscape Conservation Cooperatives were identified as a vehicle to help protect jobs and the economy from the risks associated with climate change during an international meeting of Western States and Canadian Provinces this past March (http://www.pacificcoastcollaborative.org/Pages/ThirdAnnualLeadersForum.aspx).

During the GLOBE Conference on Business and the Environment in Vancouver, Canada, members of the Pacific Coast Collaborative, which included leaders from California, Oregon, Washington and British Columbia, issued their 2012 West Coast Action Plan on Jobs, which included a commitment to create up to a million clean-economy jobs on the West coast within the next 10 years.

Leaders promised to leverage climate science and research to help achieve better job outcomes for communities. They also promised to “encourage sharing of scientific research underway at universities, research centers, and governmental agencies and coordinate identification of priority research topics to support decision-making and minimize overlap and duplication of effort, including the Regional Climate Science Centers, Regional Integrated Sciences and Assessments, and Landscape Conservation Cooperatives.”

“I was thrilled when I saw (more...)




Strategic Plan


The CA LCC is undergoing a Strategic Planning process and recently completed a report on our first phase. Under Phase One we interviewed a variety of interests group to help us identify the common science needs across the landscape to maximize conservation benefits throughout California.

Our next step in Phase Two is to understand the conservation decisions being made on the ground so that we may orient development of science products to meet those needs. To view a summary report from phase one, click here.



National LCC Workshop presentations


Presentations from the National LCC Workshop March 26-30, in Denver, Colorado, are available online at http://nationallcc2012.com/virtual-workshop/documents/. Session videos and workshop proceedings will be available in the coming weeks.

If you would like to complete a workshop evaluation form, visit http://www.surveygizmo.com/-s3/8-69847/2012-National-LCC-Workshop-Evaluation.



Alliance Listserve


If you would like to join our Alliance Listserve please click here.



CA LCC Quarterly

Here is CA LCC's first newsletter

Front page of the newsletter minimized, fit the column

News

Results of CA LCC-funded projects for birds, fish presented at conference

CA LCC supports USGS workshop on fog

Job plan includes the Landscape Conservation Cooperatives

CA LCC request for science projects to fund draws interest


CA LCC Map

A map of the CA LCC Large Version (PDF)


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If you have difficulty accessing content on this page, please contact the webmaster. Last Updated: 4/13/2012