The Inuit Circumpolar Council, Kawerak, and Pew Charitable Trusts invite scientists and researchers to register for a free workshop on co-production of knowledge. This is being held as part of the Alaska Marine Science Symposium (AMSS), but anyone is free to attend, even if you will not be at AMSS.
Past Events: Workshop
The Southern Rockies and Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperatives, Conservation Science Partners, and the Northern Arizona University Landscape Conservation Initiative are pleased to announce a second workshop as part of the Green River Basin Landscape Conservation Design (GRB LCD), an effort to support coordination and actions across boundaries and jurisdictions to meet mutual goals for conservation targets in the sage-steppe and aquatic-riparian ecosystems of the Green River Basin
The 2017 Rio Grande / Rio Bravo Binational Forum will bring together a variety of water users, such as farmers, ranchers, city officials, tribal members, policymakers, business leaders, conservationists, and scientists from Mexico and the United States. Together, we will share creative approaches to meet river management and water challenges, inspire collaboration, and highlight and build upon successes to protect the river for future generations.
Desired Outcomes
One of the major challenges of adapting to a rapidly changing landscape is translating broad concepts into specific, tangible actions. Vulnerability assessments are a key step toward identifying effective management strategies and prioritizing specific management actions to conserve and restore natural resources.
In 2016, the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes LCC Coastal Conservation Working Group convened land managers and stakeholders from Saginaw Bay to western Lake Erie at a pair of workshops to strategically identify, plan and implement effective coastal wetland conservation efforts in this pilot area.
One of the major challenges of adapting to a rapidly changing landscape is translating broad concepts into specific, tangible actions. Vulnerability assessments are a key step toward identifying effective management strategies and prioritizing specific management actions to conserve and restore natural resources.
A preconference workshop on gray wolf managment will be held in conjunction with the Native American Fish and Wildlife Southwest Region Conference. The primary goal of a workshop is for the Tribes in the southwest to hear directly from Tribal biologists and natural resource managers from areas outside of the southwest, including Tribes from, but not limited to, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, and Oregon about wolf management on other reservation lands.
Workshop Goal: Develop a set of work plans for implementing joint landscape-scale adaptation actions.
Workshop Information:
Most prescribed burns in Nebraska occur in early spring and might be postponed until next year if weather and other factors shorten the burn season. Instead of limiting our window of opportunity to just a few months of prescribed burning, consider using fire throughout the year to extend the burn season and accomplish land management objectives. During the growing season, for example, burns typically have a greater impact on brush.