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Webinars & Videos

Webinars & Videos

Browse this curated selection of webinars and videos about landscape conservation and working lands to find what you need to augment your learning experience.

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Webinars and Videos

Customize your learning experience with a selection of webinars and videos about landscape conservation and working lands.

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Greg Judy Talks Electric Fencing and Gates for Sheep and Cattle

Greg Judy Talks Electric Fencing and Gates for Sheep and Cattle

by Web Editor — Jun 04, 2019 03:15 PM

While Greg designed these fences to keep goats, sheep and guardian dogs in, they work for his cattle too. See what he’s using and consider how you’d adapt it to your operation.

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The Present and Future Possibilities of Landscape Scale Conservation: AppLCC Ethnographic Study Video of Presentation

The Present and Future Possibilities of Landscape Scale Conservation: AppLCC Ethnographic Study Video of Presentation

The Landscape Conservation Cooperative (LCC) program was created under a secretarial order to develop regional conservation partnerships – under the Department of the Interior – that aimed to coordinate regional conservation planning in response to climate change impacts. Because they were partner-driven efforts, each of the 22 LCCs followed a distinct trajectory and implemented diverse projects, meaning that there is value in exploring how specific LCCs, such as the AppLCC, approached regional conservation. This study assesses the successes, limitations, and impacts of the AppLCC, with the aim of providing insights for future regional conservation partnership.

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The Present and Future Possibilities of Landscape Scale Conservation: AppLCC Ethnographic Study Video of Presentation

The Landscape Conservation Cooperative (LCC) program was created under a secretarial order to develop regional conservation partnerships – under the Department of the Interior – that aimed to coordinate regional conservation planning in response to climate change impacts. Because they were partner-driven efforts, each of the 22 LCCs followed a distinct trajectory and implemented diverse projects, meaning that there is value in exploring how specific LCCs, such as the AppLCC, approached regional conservation. This study assesses the successes, limitations, and impacts of the AppLCC, with the aim of providing insights for future regional conservation partnership.

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The use of crowdsourced and georeferenced photography to aid in visual resource planning and conservation

The use of crowdsourced and georeferenced photography to aid in visual resource planning and conservation

The advent of Web 2.0 and the growth of social media platforms have fostered an environment for the documentation and sharing of landscape imagery. In addition to looking at the site scale, using these big data allows for visual landscape assessment at the regional scale. The onset of Marcellus shale gas development in the state of Pennsylvania concurrent with the rapidly widening availability of crowd-sourced citizen photography has provided a valuable opportunity to study crowdsourced and georeferenced photography as an aid in visual resource conservation design and planning. As Trombulak and Baldwin (2010) outline, the goals for this work include identifying spatially explicit measures of change in the landscape, being able to predict spatially explicit threats to the landscape, recognizing sites within the region that are important or irreplaceable, and prioritizing areas for conservation action to address pressures and preserve/conserve exceptional sites in the future.

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About

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.

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“One Stick at a Time” in pursuit of climate adaptations for a more sustainable future

“One Stick at a Time” in pursuit of climate adaptations for a more sustainable future

This film follows land managers in the Methow Valley, Washington for over a year, from forests to rivers, from fires to snowfall, from beaver capture to release as they try to come to grips with the impacts of climate change and the possible adaptation options right in front of them. It is a conversation starter for answering the question "What can I do?" With support from the best climate experts in the Northwest, it is a chance for each of us to think about what our landscapes will be like ten decades from now. It is a nudge to start today to make our surroundings better than they would be if we did nothing. The film was conceived as part of the 10 Decades Project, the goal of which is to inspire thousands of us to take measurable, concrete steps for climate adaptation in every area for which we are responsible.

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TRGT/AppLCC Meeting Presenations

Find here a PDF of the PPT presentations from the meeting. Notes from facilitated discussions are included.

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The eDNAtlas and Archive for aquatic taxa in Western North America

The eDNAtlas and Archive for aquatic taxa in Western North America

The ease, efficiency, and sensitivity of environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling of species in aquatic environments is leading to an explosion in its use across North America.

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AppLCC resources for the conservation community

Find here a PDF of G.Bee and M. Cimitile's meeting presentations.

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"Cold Water and Hardtack" Episode 308 | Tennessee Uncharted

"Cold Water and Hardtack" Episode 308 | Tennessee Uncharted

Host Erick Baker and the Tennessee Uncharted crew take us on an adventure that looks to the future of water health and species diversity in Tennessee and pays tribute to the past in a Civil War reenactment.

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We take care of our Natural Resources in Haywood County NC

We take care of our Natural Resources in Haywood County NC

Our locals and visitors alike take pride in the quality of the water here in Haywood County NC. The agriculture, flora/fauna, wildlife, breweries and more all rely on the quality of our water. Haywood County holds something very precious and rare - water that comes directly from our mountains and nowhere else. We are the only county east of the Mississippi River with headwaters that originate within our county lines. The activity of our community impacts other regions downstream and as award winning author Wendell Berry once said, “Do unto those downstream as you would have those upstream do unto you.” I feel it is our responsibility and duty to safeguard our waterways.

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"Riparian" Episode 309 | Tennessee Uncharted

"Riparian" Episode 309 | Tennessee Uncharted

With 2016’s devastating wildfires and learning about riparian zones feeding Tennessee’s waterways, host Erick Baker discovers that sometimes it takes science to restore faith in our ability to take care of our fair state.

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Haywood Waterways Kids in the Creek

Haywood Waterways Kids in the Creek

Kids in the Creek was created by the Tennessee Valley Authority and brought to Haywood County in 1997. The purpose is to expose 8th grade students to hands-on activities that raise awareness of the importance of clean water and the issues that could degrade water quality. The students rotate among four stations: the EnviroScape watershed model, water chemistry, fish, and benthic macroinvertebrates. At the fish station, the students collect data for a classroom exercise that ties everything together.

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Haywood Waterways Watershed Restoration 2015

Haywood Waterways Watershed Restoration 2015

A look into restoration efforts in Haywood County, NC from the Haywood Waterways Association.

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