Return to Wildland Fire
Return to Northern Bobwhite site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to SE Firemap
Return to the Landscape Partnership Literature Gateway Website
return
return to main site

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Sections

Personal tools

You are here: Home / Expertise Search / Hessmiller, Rosanne
1985 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type

























New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
The Network is now identifying data resources and other information derived from these activities and, when possible, providing access to these resources via the Conservation Action Map and Network portal. Members will continue to be able to enter additional projects to the Conservation Map and tag new resources produced from their efforts.
Located in Research / / Interactive Conservation Planning for the Appalachian LCC: Appalachian NatureScape / Natural Resources Fellowship
Across the Tennessee River Basin is a collaboration within the Appalachian LCC bringing together multiple agencies and stakeholders in a joint effort to plan and deliver landscape conservation actions to protect one of the most diverse areas for aquatic species in North America.
Located in Research / / Interactive Conservation Planning for the Appalachian LCC: Appalachian NatureScape / Natural Resources Fellowship
The project research team worked closely with designated technical teams from each major region in the Appalachian LCC to offer unique insights and input to help guide the interactive conservation planning process. After each round of feedback, revised conservation scenarios are being produced.
Located in Research / Funded Projects / Interactive Conservation Planning for the Appalachian LCC: Appalachian NatureScape
Integrating Cultural Resource Preservation at a Landscape Level
A collaborative research project sponsored by the National Park Service and the Appalachian LCC seeks to integrate cultural resources, such as historic bridges and Civil War Battlefields, into landscape conservation planning and design to emphasize both natural and cultural resources in defining conservation priorities.
Located in Research / Funded Projects
File Identifying the Valued Ordinary, as a Step toward Scenic Landscape Conservation. Visual Resource Stewardship Conference Landscape and Seascape Management in a Time of Change.
The Georgia Scenic Byways program (GDOT, 2017) is a “grassroots effort … to identify, preserve, promote and protect treasured corridors throughout the state.” There are fifteen such corridors designated by Georgia DOT, their only protection is a restriction on roadside billboards. Despite frequent avocation of the beauties of Georgia highways, there is no systematic articulation of the physical attributes of a scenic landscape, how such attributes would be identified and thus protected, nor the expertise or resources to devote to new discoveries.
Located in Research / Funded Projects / Integrating Cultural Resource Preservation at a Landscape Level
Report Card to Assess Current Conditions, Ecological Health of Natural Resources in Tennessee River Basin
Located in Research / / Interactive Conservation Planning for the Appalachian LCC: Appalachian NatureScape / Natural Resources Fellowship
Project Report Card to Assess Current Conditions, Ecological Health of Natural Resources in Tennessee River Basin
The Appalachian LCC is supporting researchers from the University of Maryland in developing an assessment of ecological health, or a “Report Card”, for the Tennessee River Basin.
Located in Research / / Interactive Conservation Planning for the Appalachian LCC: Appalachian NatureScape / Natural Resources Fellowship
About
The WLFW workspaces were created within this portal to provide user-friendly sharing of program and technical information between federal and state agencies, private non-government organizations, and landowners. Open sharing of information is often subverted by agency or partner access limitations related to use of commercial software, government sharepoint sites, etc. These workspaces will be both public and private, depending on the sensitivity of the information stored and as determined by the original source of that information. Draft documents and sensitive data (such as the locations of federally listed species) can be categorized as private and accessible only to named individuals. However, most information will be posted publicly to facilitate our intent for wide distribution of educational materials, technical content, videos and podcasts, and online training related to implementation of Working Lands for Wildlife.
Landowner Information
Landowners are our most important partners! Working Lands for Wildlife seeks to develop voluntary partnerships with landowners to create improvements across landscapes that benefit farm and local economies. These partnerships "keep working lands working" – while sustaining fish and wildlife. In addition, Working Lands for Wildlife regularly hosts workshops that include landowners.
Landscapes & Wildlife