-
How to Use Criteria to Bring Items Into a Collection
-
Definitions and examples of the different criteria fields available
Located in
Resources
/
Help
/
Using and Adding Collections
-
How to Use Criteria to Bring Items Into a Collection
-
Definitions and examples of the different criteria fields available
Located in
Help
/
…
/
Getting Started: How To Add Content to the Portal
/
Adding Collections
-
How to Use Criteria to Bring Items Into a Collection
-
Definitions and examples of the different criteria fields available
Located in
Help
/
General User Support
/
Using and Adding Collections
-
How to Use Dates for Collection Criteria and Sorting
-
Explanation of the Dates associated with Collections and their uses
Located in
Resources
/
Help
/
Using and Adding Collections
-
How to Use Dates for Collection Criteria and Sorting
-
Explanation of the Dates associated with Collections and their uses
Located in
Help
/
General User Support
/
Using and Adding Collections
-
How to Use FTP to Upload Files to the Portal
-
Instructions for using the File Transfer Protocol (FTP) with an FTP client for uploading batches of files to the portal.
Located in
Resources
/
Help
-
Hydrological modeling for flow-ecology science in the Southeastern United States
-
Stream flows are essential for maintaining healthy aquatic ecosystems and for supporting human water supply needs. Integrated modeling approaches assessing the impact of changes in climate, land use, and water withdrawals on stream flows and the subsequent impact of changes in flow regime on aquatic biota at multiple spatial scales are necessary to insure an adequate supply of water for humans and healthy river ecosystems. The combined application of simple, large scale models with more complex, high resolution models has the potential to provide for more robust climate change impact studies, which focus on maintaining a better balance between the availability of water to support aquatic assemblages while conserving water for long-term human needs than using either approach in isolation.
Located in
Research
-
Impacts
-
Glaciers have shrunk, ice on rivers and lakes is breaking up earlier, and plant and animal ranges have shifted. Continued changes to Earth's climate could influence agricultural crop yields, affect human health, and impact our energy supply. Global climate change has already had observable effects on the environment and will continue to impact society in a variety of ways today and tomorrow.
-
Implementation
-
This area of the portal provides our community with vital information in order to accomplish the vision of landscape-scale conservation planning and design.
-
Instructions – Central Appalachian Spreadsheet
-
This spreadsheet is a subset of a larger data set that contains a compilation of climate change vulnerability scores for over 700 species in the Appalachian LCC.
Located in
Vulnerability
/
Climate Change Vulnerability