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The Literature Gateway Project
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Forest management affects wildlife habitat by altering the structure and composition of vegetation communities. Every wildlife species uses a specific set of resources associated with different species and ages of forest trees (e.g., nesting cavities, den sites, acorn crops, fruit resources) to survive and reproduce. Forest managers, wildlife conservation groups, policy makers, and other stakeholders often need to review the literature on forest bird-vegetation relationships to inform decisions on natural resource management or ecosystem restoration. The literature gateway facilitates the exploration of this literature, helping users find references on a diverse range of management-relevant topics that have been compiled by subject experts based on searches of >60 different sources spanning the past 50+ years.
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Projects
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SE FireMap 2.0
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Webinars
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Webinars for practitioners and the public to learn about the Southeast (SE) FireMap and next steps in its development as an operational decision-support tool for resource managers. In this next phase, the SE FireMap aims to provide up-to-date information to support fire management and conservation efforts. Representatives from USDA-NRCS, Tall Timbers Research, and USGS lead the webinar.
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SE FireMap 2.0
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Workshops
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Workshops will be held in 2023 and 2024 to gather input on the SE FireMap's development.
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SE FireMap 2.0
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The Clean Water Act Owner's Manual is coming soon!
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The Clean Water Act became law 50 years ago. To commemorate the milestone of this landmark legislation and mark our continued resolve to protect waterways across our country, River Network is updating our transformational Clean Water Act Owner’s Manual!
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News & Events
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South Atlantic Blueprint Newsletter September 2022
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Fall webinar schedule, on track to release Blueprint 2022 this fall, SECAS article in "Wild Weekly".
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News & Events
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Conservation Newsletters
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South Atlantic LCC Newsletters
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USDA NRCS Working Lands for Wildlife
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Through Working Lands for Wildlife (WLFW), USDA uses a win-win approach to systematically target conservation efforts to improve agricultural and forest productivity which enhance wildlife habitat on working landscapes. Target species are used as barometers for success because their habitat needs are representative of healthy, functioning ecosystems where conservation efforts benefit a much broader suite of species.
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LP Members
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Organizations Search
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SE FireMap 1.0 (Beta)
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SE FireMap Version 1.0
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SE FireMap Version 1.0 Web Viewer Original
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SE FireMap 1.0 (Beta)