
Reports
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Ecological Inventory Manual(HTML)
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Ecological Inventory Manual
Appendix(HTML)
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Ecological Inventory
Manual(PDF)
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Authors:
Noel Soucy, Benjamin Marckmann, Keith Slauson, Daniel Boiano, and Shayne
Green
Produced by: LEGACY – The Landscape Connection
June 2001
This is a not-for-profit, non-published,
uncopyrighted manual created and compiled for community use in the
conservation of wildlands. This manual offers valuable ecological inventory
techniques for community members who wish to understand and steward their
homesteads for wildness.
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Rare and Threatened
Vegetation of the California North Coastal Basin(HTML)
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Rare and Threatened
Vegetation of the California North Coastal Basin(PDF)
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Author:
Shayne Green
Produced by: Legacy-The Landscape Connection
1999
The purpose of this document
is to provide information that will help citizens and resource managers
identify, protect and restore rare and threatened vegetation in the
California North Coastal Basin. It addresses floristic diversity primarily at
the series-level, but contains information that will be useful in both
broader and finer-scale approaches to conservation. The primary project
objectives are to:
1) identify series of the CNCB that are uncommon, rare
and threatened on a statewide and/or global scale,
2) identify habitats and community types associated
with high numbers of uncommon, rare, and threatened series within the
region,
3) recommend strategies for identifying and
protecting rare and threatened vegetation, and 4)
present this information in a format that is useful to citizens, scientists,
educators, and others interested in the rare and unique vegetation of the
region.
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Klamath/Central Pacific Coast
Ecoregion Restoration Strategy: Vol. 1 - Description of the Ecoregion(HTML)
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Klamath/Central Pacific Coast
Ecorecion Restoration Strategy: Vol. 1 - Description of the Ecoregion(PDF)
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Authors:
Allen Cooperrider and Ron Garrett
September 30, 1998
This volume is the first of three volumes describing a strategy for restoring
the function and health of
the Klamath / Central Pacific Coast Ecoregion (Figure I-1), hereafter termed
the "Klamath
Ecoregion." In this volume, we describe the ecoregion from an ecosystem
perspective and
summarize some of the human forces that have caused or are continuing to
cause ecosystem
degradation.
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Ecological Assessment
of Potential Wilderness Areas in the Klamath-Siskiyou Region of North Western
California(HTML)
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Ecological Assessment
of Potential Wilderness Areas in the Klamath-Siskiyou Region of North Western
California(PDF)
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Ecological
Assessment of Potential Wilderness Areas in the Klamath-Siskiyou Region of
North Western California Appendix(PDF)
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Ecological
Assessment of Potential Wilderness Areas in the Klamath-Siskiyou Region of
North Western California - Appendix(XLS)
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Authors:
Chris Trudel, Curtice Jacoby, Karin Riley-Thron, Per Tillisch
Produced by: LEGACY – The Landscape Connection
2002
U.S. Senator
Barbara Boxer and U.S. Representative Mike Thompson are considering forty-six
potential wilderness areas (PWAs) in the Klamath-Siskiyou region of
northwestern California for wilderness designation. The northern California
portion of the Klamath-Siskiyou Ecoregion contains many unprotected roadless
areas of varying sizes and ecological importance.
The California Wild
Heritage Campaign (CWHC) is now proposing legislation to protect millions of
acres of land that are mapped as PWAs across the state and in the northern
California portion of the Klamath-Siskiyou ecoregion. However, the PWAs
mapped by CWHC have no documented ecological attribute information from which
to support their inclusion in the proposed wilderness legislation.
The purpose of this report
is to document the individual contribution of the PWAs to a regional reserve
design for the California portion of the Klamath-Siskiyou region. The
information contained in this report documents the important ecological
contribution the PWAs make to the regional reserve system of the
Klamath~Siskiyou Ecoregion in northwestern California. The information will
be used to assist the CWHC, conservation groups, and legislators in
documenting the importance of PWAs in the Klamath-Siskiyou ecoregion and
ensuring their inclusion in the proposed wilderness legislation.
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Ecological Integrity
Assessment of The North Coastal Basin(HTML)
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Ecological Integrity
Assessment of The North Coastal Basin(PDF)
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Authors:
Keith Slauson, Danny Boianno, Shayne Green, and Noel Soucy
Produced by: LEGACY – The Landscape Connection
November 16, 1998
One of Legacy’s
primary goals is to create a biodiversity conservation strategy for the
California North Coastal Basin (NCB). This plan will highlight a network of
areas within the region that stand out from the others due to their
ecological function and conservation value. One step in the process of
locating these areas is to understand the current level of ecological
integrity within the major community types across the NCB.
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Forsythe Wildlife
Uplands Ecology Assessment (HTML)
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Author: Linda
Gray
Produced
by: LEGACY – The Landscape Connection
August 14, 2005
The primary purpose of this wildlife assessment is to demonstrate the
value of the Forsythe Watershed as part of a potential wildlife linkage
between Jackson Demonstration State Forest (JDSF) on the west side of
Mendocino County and the Mendocino National Forest (MNF) on the east side.
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LEGACY-The Landscape Connection Long
Range Strategy: Creating a Biodiversity Conservation Network(HTML)
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LEGACY-The Landscape Connection Long
Range Strategy: Creating a Biodiversity Conservation Network(PDF)
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Authors:
Curtice Jacoby, Noel Soucy, Daniel Boiano, Steven Day, Shayne Green, KayDee
Simon, Keith Slauson, and Chris Trudel
Produced by: LEGACY – The Landscape Connection
April 29, 1999
The long-term
goal of LEGACY - The Landscape Connection is to implement a Biodiversity
Conservation Plan (BCP) for the California North Coastal Basin. Based on
scientific analysis and collective community input, we are currently
delineating ecologically and culturally important areas in the California
North Coastal Basin (CNCB). Upon completion of this mapping process, we will
work collectively to develop watershed level biodiversity conservation plans
that responds to the site-specific requirements of each community within the
planning area and the CNCB as a whole. We promote social, cultural, and
economic practices that maintain or restore the region's ecological
integrity.
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The Bioreserve Strategy for Conserving
Biodiversity(HTML)
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The Bioreserve Strategy for Conserving
Biodiversity(PDF)
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Authors:
Allen Cooperrider, Stephen Day, and Curtice Jacoby
02/07/97
The bioreserve
strategy is a promising but largely untested approach to conserving
biodiversity. The strategy involves zoning regional landscapes into areas
that range from total protection (minimal human activity) to areas of
intensive human use. Zoning, in this context, does not necessarily refer to a
formal regulatory designation, but rather to a societal agreement to limit
certain human activities and uses on certain lands. This agreement may be
expressed and played out in a variety of ways ranging from formal designation
as reserves or parks to conservation easements or landowner agreements.
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Conservation Value: Focal Species
and Connectivity in California's North Coast(HTML)
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Conservation Value: Focal Species
and Connectivity in California's North Coast(PDF)
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Authors:
Robert Brothers, Chris Trudel, and Curtice Jacoby
Produced by: LEGACY – The Landscape Connection
02/07/97
The Pacific
Fisher, a rare small carnivore, was used as an indicator species for the
mature forest habitat that once dominated this 5.5 million acre region. Six
basic factors were used to assess the values of land for the conservation of
biodiversity, and the largest concentrations of high value areas were used as
"core areas" for the Fisher and other mature forest species.
Connectivity between these areas was then assessed using road and habitat
information. The result is a map of places that will be most important to
protect if biodiversity in this region is to be maintained and restored.
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Recommended
Readings
Aberly,
Doug, ed. 1993. Boundaries of Home, Mapping for Local Empowerment.
New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island BC.
Allaby, M. 1994. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Ecology. Oxford
University Press.
Noss Reed F. 2000. The Redwood Forest, History, Ecology, and Conservation
of the Coast Redwoods. Save-the-Redwoods League and Island Press, Covelo,
Ca.
Noss, Reed F. (Ed.) 1998. Redwood Ecology. Save-the-Redwoods-League. (In
prep.)
NOSS, REED F. AND ALLEN Y. COOPERRIDER. 1994. Saving Nature's
Legacy--Protecting and Restoring Biodiversity. Island Press, Covelo, CA.,
417pp.
Noss R.F., O’Connell M.A., Murphy D.D. 1997. The Science of Conservation
Planning, Habitat Conservation under the Endangered Species Act. World
Wildlife Fund. 121 pp.
Pickett S., Ostfeld R., Shachak M., Likens G., eds. 1997. The Ecological
Basis of Conservation, Heterogeneity, Ecosystems and Biodiversity. Chapman
& Hall, New York. "Biological Corridors: Form, Function, Efficacy.
Linear conservation areas may function as biological corridors but they may not
mitigate against additional habitat loss." Rosenburg D., Noon B., Meslow
E.
Sawyer, J.O. and T. Keeler-Wolf. 1995. A Manual of California Vegetation.
California Native Plant Society, Sacramento.
Stebbins, R.C. 1985. A field guide to western reptiles and amphibians.
Houghton Mifflin Company, New York. 336 pp.
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Landscape Connection
P.O.
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(707)
472-0275
Email Legacy -
TLC: ukiah@legacy-tlc.org
legacy@legacy-tlc.org