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Organization Equity and Inclusion
The Landscape Partnership Equity & Inclusion space is designed to: Highlight best practices in equity and inclusion for conservation professionals, partners, agencies, and communities; Develop an ever-evolving toolkit of equity and inclusion resources to support work with, and for, underserved communities; and Create a collaborative space where stakeholders can work together to improve equity and inclusion in conservation.
Located in LP Members / Organizations Search
File PDF document Eriksson et al 1989.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / EDD-FIK
File PDF document Ernst 1992.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / EDD-FIK
Rich Nauman of Esri presents on how Esri web services have been applied to PAD-US data, creating many options for using PAD-US in web applications and on desktop GIS systems. Approximately 15 minutes.
Located in Apps, Maps, & Data
File PDF document ESSAY : The worst-case scenario
Stephen Schneider explores what a world with 1,000 parts per million of CO2 in its atmosphere might look like.
Located in Resources / Climate Science Documents
Video ECMAScript program Establishing Native Grass Forages:A Brief Overview w/ Dr. Pat Keyser
Day 1, Session 2. Native Warm-Season Grasses Webinar with Dr. Pat Keyser and Jef Hodges. Presented December 1, 2021.
Located in Training Resources / Webinars and Instructional Videos / Webinar- Course on Native Warm-Season Grass Forages and Grazing Management for Bobwhites
File PDF document Evaluating the Effects and Effectiveness of Post-fire Seeding Treatments in Western Forests
Key Findings• In studies that evaluated soil erosion in seeded versus unseeded controls, 78 percent revealed that seeding did not reduce erosion relative to unseeded controls. Even when seeding significantly increased vegetative cover, there was insufficient plant cover to stabilize soils within the first two years after fire. •Sixty percent of the studies reported that seeding deterred native plant recovery in the short-term. •Out of 11 papers that evaluated the ability of seeding to curtail non-native plant species invasions, 54 percent stated that seeding treatments were effective and 45 percent stated they were ineffective.• Forty papers and 67 Burned Area Reports dated between 1970 and 2006 revealed an increased use of native species and annual cereal grains/hybrids during seeding treatments over time, with native species dominating seed mixes. • From 2000 to 2007, total Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) seeding expenditures have increased substantially, reaching an average of $3.3 million per year—a 192 percent increase compared to the average spent over the previous 30 years.
Located in Resources / Climate Science Documents
File PDF document Evans et al 1986.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / EDD-FIK
Event: Technical Training Workshop-The Stream Simulation Design Approach for Providing Aquatic Organism Passage at Road-Stream Crossings
This 4.5-day workshop will present the USDA Forest Service’s stream simulation method, an ecosystem-based approach for designing and constructing a channel through a road-stream crossing structure that reestablishes physical and ecological continuity along the stream corridor.
Located in News & Events / Events / Upload New Events
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