Visit the Western Region of the WLFW
Return to Wildland Fire
Return to Northern Bobwhite site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Return to Working Lands for Wildlife site
Navigate WLFW Landscapes
Grasslands and Savannas
Aquatics
Eastern Deciduous Forests
Western Landscapes
Return to SE Firemap
Return to the Landscape Partnership Literature Gateway Website
RETURN TO LANDSCAPE PARTNERSHIP SITE
Navigate Target Species
American Black Duck
Blanding's Turtle
Bog turtle
Colorado River Mussels
Conasauga River Aquatic Species
Eastern Hellbender
Golden-Winged Warbler
Gopher Tortoise
Lesser Prairie-Chicken
Monarch Butterfly
Northern Bobwhite, Grasslands & Savannas
Northeast Turtles
Sage Grouse
Shorebirds of Louisiana Wetlands
Southwestern Willow Flycatcher
Yazoo Darter
Companion Sites
Applcc
Conservation Design
Conservation Planning Atlas
Conservation Planning and GIS Resources
Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture
Ecosystem Benefits and Risks
Energy
Nature and Society
Imperiled Aquatic Species for the UTRB
North Atlantic LCC
Science Applications Online Learning
Southeast Aquatic Resources Partnership
Tennessee River Basin
Whitewater to Bluewater
Skip to content.
|
Skip to navigation
Search Site
only in current section
Advanced Search…
Sections
Home
About
Catalog: How to use the Landscape Partnership
Services
Video: Intro to the Landscape Partnership Workspaces
Working Lands for Wildlife (WLFW) Workspaces
FAQs
Video: Welcome to the Landscape Partnership
A Video Collection on LP Tools
LP Members
Workspaces
Organizations Search
Eastern Brook Trout
Southeast Aquatic Resources Partnership SARP
Working Lands for Wildlife
Home
About
Landscapes & Wildlife
Landowner Information
Learning & Tech Transfer
News & Announcements
Workspace
Our Community
Expertise Search
Voices from the Community
Community Map
How To Use The LP Expertise Search
WLFW
Home
About
LP Members
Working Lands for Wildlife
Home
About
Our Partners and Organizations
Our Community and Expertise Search
Where We Work
Landscapes & Wildlife
Landscapes
Wildlife
Landowner Information
Landowner Forums
Landowner Resources
Landowner Feedback
Learning & Tech Transfer
General Resources and Publications
Webinars & Videos
Apps, Maps, & Data
Training Resources
News & Announcements
Events
Stories
WLFW Newsletters
Workspace
WLFW Communications Workspace
Things You Can Do in the Workspace
Our Community
WLFW
Issues
Resources
Projects
Apps, Maps, & Data
News & Events
Training
Issues
The Anchor Approach to Connectivity
Home
ANCHOR Resources
ANCHOR MAP
ANCHOR Registration Form
Wildland Fire
Nature and Society
Ecosystem Benefits & Risks
Energy
Resources
Projects
Project Search
Submit a Project
Products
Apps, Maps, & Data
Literature Gateway: A Systemic Map of Bird-Vegetation Relationships in Eastern and Boreal Forests
Bobscapes
BirdLocale
SE FireMap
Landscape Partnership Spatial Datasets
Aquatic and Freshwater Spatial Data
North Atlantic Spatial Data
Appalchian Boundary and Resource Maps
Regional and National Maps
Zip Area Maps
GIS & Conservation Planning Toolkit
Home
Conservation Planning
Tools & Resources
Planning In Practice
Data
Training
Nature's Network
News & Events
Training
Videos and Webinars
Training Resources Exchange
Landscape Partnership Online Learning Network
Personal tools
Log in
Jump to Child Site
Landscape Partnership
Aquatics
BirdLocale
Black Duck
Bobscapes
Bog Turtle
Eastern Deciduous Forests
Eastern Hellbender
Ecosystem Benefits & Risks
Energy
GIS & Conservation Planning Toolkit
Golden-Winged Warbler
Grasslands and Savannas
Imperiled Aquatic Species Conservation Strategy for the Upper TN River Basin
Nature and Society
NatureScape
Northern Bobwhite Quail
SE FireMap
The Anchor Approach to Connectivity
The Literature Gateway
Western Landscapes
Wildland Fire
Working Lands for Wildlife
You are here:
Home
/
Expertise Search
/
Hessmiller, Rosanne
Info
Search results
Subscribe to an always-updated RSS feed.
2132
items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type
Select All/None
Page
Event
File
Google Doc
HTML Tile
Image
Importer
Link
News Item
Organization
Person
Message Board
Comment
Forum
Product
Project
RSS Tile
Slider Item
Spatial Data
Tile Page
Video
Story
Zip File
New items since
Yesterday
Last week
Last month
Ever
Sort by
relevance
·
date (newest first)
·
alphabetically
Smith, Timothy
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
last modified
Feb 09, 2025 12:37 PM
Located in
Expertise Search
Heredia, Madeline
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
last modified
Jun 30, 2025 04:41 PM
Located in
Expertise Search
Tarver, Aaryn
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
last modified
Feb 14, 2025 03:11 PM
Located in
Expertise Search
Working Lands for Wildlife (WLFW) Northern Bobwhite Grasslands and Savannas National Partnership Meeting Feb 23rd - 24th 2021
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
published
Mar 09, 2021
—
last modified
Apr 11, 2024 07:25 PM
— filed under:
WLFW Training Resources
Presentations from the 2021 WLFW Northern Bobwhite, Grasslands and Savannas Partnership Meeting
Located in
Learning & Tech Transfer
/
…
/
Inbox
/
WLFW Northern Bobwhite, Grasslands, and Savannas Partnership Meeting Feb 2021
Cave and Karst Data Access
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
published
Feb 03, 2017
—
last modified
Jul 05, 2017 02:15 PM
The cave and karst dataset from this research is available through our Conservation Planning Atlas.
Located in
Projects
/
Science Investments
/
Classification and Mapping of Cave and Karst Resources
Predicting the Occurrence of Cave-Inhabiting Fauna Based on Features of the Earth Surface Environment
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
published
Feb 01, 2018
— filed under:
Cave and Karst
Final Report
Located in
Projects
/
Science Investments
/
Classification and Mapping of Cave and Karst Resources
Assessing Vulnerability of Species and Habitats to Large-scale Impacts: CCVA
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
published
Aug 31, 2015
—
last modified
Mar 29, 2021 08:04 PM
New vulnerability assessments for 41 species and 3 habitats in the Appalachians are now available. The conservation community can view and search each of these assessments by relative raking or vulnerability scores, conservation status ranks, state and subregion of assessment, and higher taxonomy. In addition, principle investigators NaturServe compiled the results of 700 species assessments previously completed by other researchers as well as assessments on several habitats.
Located in
Projects
/
Science Investments
CCVA Fact Sheet Meadows
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
published
Jan 26, 2018
CCVA Meadow
Located in
Projects
/
…
/
Assessing Vulnerability of Species and Habitats to Large-scale Impacts
/
CCVA Fact Sheets
CCVA Fact Sheet: Meadows and Marshlands
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
published
Jan 26, 2018
Meadows are open grasslands where grass and other non-woody plants are the primary vegetation. With no tree coverage, meadows are typically open, sunny areas that attract flora and fauna that require both ample space and sunlight. These conditions allow for the growth of many wildflowers and are typically important ecosystems for pollinating insects. Marshlands are like meadows in that they typically have no tree coverage and host primarily grasses and woody plants. However, a defining characteristic of marshlands is their wetland features. Predicted climate change will largely impact changes in temperature and moisture availability in meadows and marshlands systems, likely having a cascading effect on a species habitat and increasing stress to many of these species. The Appalachian LCC funded NatureServe to conduct vulnerability assessments on a suite of plants, animals, and habitats within the Appalachians. These assessments can be used as an early warning system to alert resource managers about changing conditions.
Located in
Projects
/
…
/
Assessing Vulnerability of Species and Habitats to Large-scale Impacts
/
CCVA Fact Sheets
CCVA Fact Sheet: Forest and Woodlands
by
Rosanne Hessmiller
—
published
Jan 26, 2018
Forest/Woodland habitats describe large areas primarily dominated by trees, with moderate ground coverage, such as grasses and shrubs. Density, tree height, and land use may all vary, though woodland is typically used to describe lower density forests. A forest may have an open canopy, but a woodland must have an open canopy with enough sunlight to reach the ground and limited shade. Predicted climate change will largely impact changes in temperature and moisture availability in forest/ woodlands systems, likely having a cascading effect on a species habitat and increasing stress to many of these species. The Appalachian LCC funded NatureServe to conduct vulnerability assessments on a suite of plants, animals, and habitats within the Appalachians. These assessments can be used as an early warning system to alert resource managers about changing conditions.
Located in
Projects
/
…
/
Assessing Vulnerability of Species and Habitats to Large-scale Impacts
/
CCVA Fact Sheets
« Previous 10 items
Next 10 items »
1
...
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
...
214