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 / Badash, Joseph
4408 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type


























New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Organization Virginia Department of Forestry
We protect and develop healthy, sustainable forest resources for Virginians.
Located in LP Members / Organizations Search
Virginia Tech Researchers Receive NSF Grant to Study Parental Care in Eastern Hellbender Salamanders
William Hopkins, professor of wildlife in the College of Natural Resources and Environment, is the principal investigator on a new grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) for $738,817 to study parental care in the eastern hellbender salamander.
Located in News & Events / Eastern Hellbender News
File PDF document Virtual Hot Spots
Physiological ecologists who design computer models to predict how animals handle heat are forecasting the effects of climate change
Located in Resources / Climate Science Documents
File PDF document VNHP 1994.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / VAN-WAD
File PDF document Volcanic cause of catastrophe
From the timing, it looks as if an episode of marked oceanic oxygen deficiency during the Cretaceous was the result of undersea volcanism. Studies of such events are relevant to the warming world of today. NATURE|Vol 454|17 July 2008
Located in Resources / Climate Science Documents
Vulnerability
Located in Vulnerability
File PDF document Vulnerability of terrestrial island vertebrates to projected sea-level rise
Sea-level rise (SLR) from global warming may have severe consequences for biodiversity; however, a baseline, broad- scale assessment of the potential consequences of SLR for island biodiversity is lacking. Here, we quantify area loss for over 12 900 islands and over 3000 terrestrial vertebrates in the Pacific and Southeast Asia under three different SLR scenarios (1 m, 3 m and 6 m). We used very fine-grained elevation information, which offered >100 times greater spatial detail than previous analyses and allowed us to evaluate thousands of hitherto not assessed small islands. Depending on the SLR scenario, we estimate that 15–62% of islands in our study region will be completely inundated and 19–24% will lose 50–99% of their area. Overall, we project that between 1% and 9% of the total island area in our study region may be lost. We find that Pacific species are 2–3 times more vulnerable than those in the Indomalayan or Australasian region and risk losing 4–22% of range area (1–6 m SLR). Species already listed as threatened by IUCN are particularly vulnerable compared with non-threatened species. Under a simple area loss–species loss proportion- ality assumption, we estimate that 37 island group endemic species in this region risk complete inundation of their current global distribution in the 1 m SLR scenario that is widely anticipated for this century (and 118 species under 3 m SLR). Our analysis provides a first, broad-scale estimate of the potential consequences of SLR for island biodiver- sity and our findings confirm that islands are extremely vulnerable to sea-level rise even within this century. Keywords: climate change, conservation, endemic species, island biogeography, range contractions, sea-level rise, threatened species, vertebrates
Located in Resources / Climate Science Documents
File PDF document Wabash River 1989.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / COO-CVA
File PDF document Wade 1990 Tennessee Valley Authority.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / VAN-WAD
File PDF document Wade 1990.pdf
Located in Resources / TRB Library / VAN-WAD