-
Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture
-
Logo
Located in
LP Members
/
Partner Showcase
/
Partner Logos
-
Eastern Forests Threat Center Image
-
For Newsletter
Located in
News & Events
-
Eastern_Brook_Trout
-
The Eastern Brook Trout is the only native trout that inhabits the cold, clear streams of the eastern United States. It is the state fish in many eastern states and is a prized sport fish by anglers.
Located in
Resources
/
Images
-
EBTJV Newsletter Image
-
Image for the EBTJV Newsletter
Located in
Resources
/
…
/
Images
/
Newsletter Images
-
EBTJV Summer Newsletter 2013
-
Newsletter for Summer 2013
Located in
News & Events
-
Ecological Flows 2nd Quarter Report, 2013
-
Report from Vendors of the Aquatic Ecologic Flows Project.
Located in
Research
/
…
/
Quarterly Reports
/
Q2 2013
-
Ecological Flows Banner
-
Banner for Ecological Flows Work Group
Located in
Resources
/
…
/
Images
/
Banners
-
Ecological Forestry Workshop for US Fish & Wildlife Service
-
This is an extremely valuable workshop for anyone in any Service program working with forest conservation issues, especially involving Threatened and Endangered and migratory bird species.
Located in
News & Events
/
Events
-
EcoRegions.pdf
-
Located in
Resources
/
General Resources Holdings
/
July Workshop 2012
-
Ecosystem Services and Environmental Threats Scope of Work
-
The "Assessment and Inventory of Ecosystem Services and Environmental Threats" research project will deliver an inventory of existing ecosystem services assessments, products, and decision-support or visualization tools conducted within the Appalachian LCC boundary. The inventory will document and assess the classification, methodology used, describe priority ecosystem services and how they were identified, and provide economic valuations if available. Research will also involve a regional survey and workshops within our boundary to assemble a list of high priority economic goods and services and non‐monetized values and benefits that are dependent on Appalachia’s natural assets while identifying the associated resource that support these services and benefits (such as intact forests, clean rivers, etc.). Finally a geo‐referenced assessment of the location of key ecosystem services that are linked to specific priority economic products or uses will be developed. This will include assembling datasets and generating visualization-base maps that depict relevant natural assets and identify locations of key products and issues. This information would then be used to produce a spatial interpretation of areas within Appalachia that serve critical social and environmental functions, as well as identify those that are highly vulnerable to losses associated with key ecosystem stressors.
Located in
Research
/
Ecosystem Benefits and Environmental Threats