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Image Biomass Manure
Biomass Manure
Located in Planning In Practice / Map Gallery
File Birds
Includes brief species/habitat information
Located in Data / Species & Habitat Association List
File ECMAScript program Bivalves
Includes brief species/habitat information
Located in Data / Species & Habitat Association List
Image Coal
Coal
Located in Planning In Practice / Map Gallery
File Coal Development Probability
This map depicts the future probability of development for Coal throughout the Appalachian LCC.
Located in Planning In Practice / Funded Project Maps
File Comparison of TNC and Nature Serve Terrestrial Classification
The following document was created as a means for straightforward comparison of the existing, “Terrestrial Ecological Systems of the United States” from NatureServe and the RFA application from The Nature Conservancy for Terrestrial Habitat Mapping
Located in Cooperative / / SC Indicator and Surrogate Species Work Group / Maps & GIS Materials
File D source code Conservation Planning in a Changing World
Conservation planning is the process of locating, configuring, implementing and maintaining areas that are managed to promote the persistence of biodiversity and other natural values. Conservation planning is inherently spatial. The science behind it has solved important spatial problems and increasingly influenced practice. To be effective, however, conservation planning must deal better with two types of change. First, biodiversity is not static in time or space but generated and maintained by natural processes. Second, humans are altering the planet in diverse ways at ever faster rates.
Located in Conservation Planning / Conservation Planning Literature
File Conserving the Stage: Climate Change and the Geophysical Underpinnings of Species Diversity
Conservationists have proposed methods for adapting to climate change that assume species distributions are primarily explained by climate variables. The key idea is to use the understanding of species-climate relationships to map corridors and to identify regions of faunal stability or high species turnover. An alternative approach is to adopt an evolutionary timescale and ask ultimately what factors control total diversity, so that over the long run the major drivers of total species richness can be protected. Within a single climatic region, the temperate area encompassing all of the Northeastern U.S. and Maritime Canada, we hypothesized that geologic factors may take precedence over climate in explaining diversity patterns. If geophysical diversity does drive regional diversity, then conserving geophysical settings may offer an approach to conservation that protects diversity under both current and future climates.
Located in Conservation Planning / Conservation Planning Literature
Data Basin is a science-based mapping and analysis platform that supports learning, research, and sustainable environmental stewardship. What you can do here; explore and organize data & information, create custom visualizations, drawings, & analyses, use collaborative tools in groups, publish datasets, maps, & galleries, develop decision-support and custom tools.
Located in Tools & Resources / Decision Support & Web Map Viewers
The core of Data Basin is free and provides open access to thousands of scientifically-grounded, biological, physical, and socio-economic datasets.
Located in Data / Public Data Repositories