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
Issues
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
Issues
The Anchor Approach to Connectivity
Wildland Fire
Eastern Deciduous Forest Health
Southeast FireMap
News & Announcements
Events
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
Anchor Resources
ANCHOR MAP
ANCHOR Registration Form
WLFW
Wildland Fire
SE FireMap
Nature and Society
Ecosystem Benefits & Risks
Energy
Resources
Projects
Project Search
Submit a Project
Products
Science Investments
Chesapeake Bay
Agenda North Atlantic LCC Meeting with USFWS Chesapeake Bay Area Staff
Presentation - Aquatic, Terrestrial and Landscape Conservation Design Tools and Products of the North Atlantic LCC
Presentation - Overview of North Atlantic LCC Approach, Partnership & Products & Some Coastal Stuff
Fact Sheet - The North Atlantic LCC in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed
Fact Sheet - Science Products from the North Atlantic LCC
Excercise - Using NALCC Conservation Planning Atlas on Data Basin
Landscope Chesapeake Overview
Introduction to Data Basin
Connecticut River Watershed Pilot
About the Pilot
Documents
Connecticut River Pilot Core Team
Aquatic Technical Subteam
Terrestrial and Wetland Technical Subteam
Calendar
Conservation Planning Atlas
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Gopher Tortoise
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
News & Events
Events
Conservation Newsletters
Training
Videos and Webinars
Training Resources Exchange
Landscape Partnership Online Learning Network
Personal tools
Log in
Jump to Child Site
Landscape Partnership
Appalachian Naturescape
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
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
Info
Modified items
All recently modified items, latest first.
Tolowa Dee-ni' Nation Tribes
The citizens of the Smith River Rancheria are a nation of Dee-ni' known today as the Tolowa Dee-ni'. They are governed under the Smith River Rancheria as a Federally Recognized Nation. Their Administration Office named the K'vsh-chu Administration Building is located in Smith River, California in the Pacific Northwest. Their Taa-laa-waa-dvn (Tolowa-Ancestral-Land) lays along the Pacific Coast between the watersheds of; Wilson Creek and Smith River in California and the Winchuck, Chetco, Pistol, Rogue, Elk and Sixes Rivers, extending inland up the Rogue River throughout the Applegate Valley in Oregon.
Smith River Collaborative
The Smith River Collaborative is a joint venture between Del Norte County elected officials, local and regional environmental groups (Friends of Del Norte, Klamath Forest Alliance, EPIC, KS Wild, and Smith River Alliance), local Tribes (Elk Valley Rancheria and the Tolowa Dee-ni’ Nation), the Del Norte Fire Safe Council, and the American Forest Resource Council, working in partnership with leadership from the Six Rivers National Forest.
Coconino Natural Resource Conservation District
Providing a means for people to work together for natural resource conservation and development. To work with all entities; Federal, Indian Nation, State, County, City, Corporate and/or Private. The District direction is always resource conservation through education and management principles for good stewardship.
University of Nevada, Reno
Founded in 1874, the University was established as Nevada’s land-grant institution under the Morrill Act of 1862, signed into law by President Abraham Lincoln. Today, the University is recognized as a Carnegie® Engaged University, one of the country's top research institutions by the Carnegie® Classification and a top National University by U.S. News & World Report.
Upper Snake River Tribes – Ft. McDermitt Paiute and Shoshone Tribe
The Compact of the Upper Snake River Tribes will work to ensure the protection, enhancement, and restoration of natural and cultural resources, activities, and rights of the Compacting Tribes that are reserved by Treaties and Executive Orders, protected by federal laws and agreements, or are the subject of aboriginal claims asserted by the Tribes.
Wash, Cody
Virginia Forestry Association
Virginia Forestry Association advocates on behalf of Virginia's diverse forestry community and promotes the sustainable use and conservation of forest resources to ensure their long-term benefits for all Virginians.
Society of American Foresters
The mission of the Society of American Foresters is to advance sustainable management of forest resources through science, education, and technology, promoting professional excellence while ensuring the continued health, integrity, and use of forests to benefit society in perpetuity.
Shultz, Jonathan
California Deer Association
The California Deer Association is a nonprofit, tax exempt wildlife conservation organization whose principal goal is to improve our California deer herds and other wildlife through direct financial support for habitat improvement and research projects. Seventy-five percent of the net profit from fundraising events goes to projects benefiting deer and other wildlife within California.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Mission Statement: To manage California's diverse fish, wildlife, and plant resources, and the habitats upon which they depend, for their ecological values and for their use and enjoyment by the public.
Shasta Indian Nation
The wilderness of northwestern California and southwestern Oregon, has been, and still is, the traditional homeland of the Shasta Indian people. Most traditional Shasta villages were located along the Klamath, Shasta, Salmon, and Scott Rivers, and their tributaries. The major structures of a Shasta village included the dwelling house (umma), a "big house" (okwa-umma), the sweat house (wukwu),and the menstrual hut (wapsahuumma). Each village was integrated into a larger band, each led by a headman.
Apps, Maps, and Data
Apps, Maps, & Data
Conservation design focuses on the creation of products and tools necessary for on-the-ground actions which sustain and enhance natural resources. The LP Portal is utilizing conservation design by combining geospatial data with biological information to develop maps and decision support tools that inform practitioners about the quality, quantity, and configuration of habitat needed to protect biological diversity and other valued resources. Find in this section of the Portal tools and thematic areas of focus that house maps, products, and other resources to help guide land managers with on-the-ground conservation action throughout the region.
Hall, Wesley
Sweet, Camdon
Help
About
Partnership Resources and Events Notices
SE FireMap Version 1.0 Web Viewer Original
Gateway Tool
« Previous 20 items
Next 20 items »
1
...
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
...
620