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Improving Monitoring and Adaptive Management for the Clark County, Nevada Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan
This project addressed some of the hurdles of implementing monitoring protocols on covered species for the Clark County Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP). The tasks included holding a three day monitoring workshop for all agencies and jurisdictions party to the MSHCP and reviewing monitoring protocols for four covered species developed by the Lake Mead National Recreation Area (National Park Service). The most extensive component of the project is written guidance to help improve monitoring across all agencies party to the MSHCP. This included an implementation framework for monitoring and adaptive management which covers information on setting species priorities, developing monitoring objectives and indicators, developing a study and sampling design and a plan for managing data, determining how data will be analyzed, interpreted and communicated, and making the monitoring process adaptive. The framework was used as the basis of developing model monitoring protocols for the threecorner milkvetch (Astragalus geyeri var. triquetrus) and the Las Vegas bearpoppy (Arctomecon californica).
Completed: June 2009
Publication: Sutter, Robert, Sonja Kokos and Dianne Bangle. 2009. Improving the Implementation of Ecological Monitoring and Adaptive Management in the Clark County Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan. The Desert Conservation Program, Clark County, Nevada
Monitoring the Status and Effectiveness of Large Forest Conservation Projects
In response to the International Paper Acquisition Project (282,000 acres in 11
states) by The Nature Conservancy in 2006, Rob Sutter led a team to assess both
the success of the project (the status of each property in meeting the expected
conservation objectives) and the effectiveness of several commonly used protection
strategies (selling to Timber Investment Management Organizations, the effectiveness
of Forest Certification Programs [FSC, SFI], the success of working forests, the
use of conservation easements on private lands). To assess the status of each property
in relation to its expected conservation objective, the project developed a tiered
monitoring approach. The first level of monitoring relied on remote sensing and
expert knowledge to determine if the property was meeting its expected conservation
objective. The team used a leading edge remote sensing approach (tassel-cap change
detection) and a systematic survey methodology with thirteen indicators of protection
and management. Higher levels of monitoring that incorporate ground-based sampling
were implemented when necessary to assess the conservation objectives. Assessing
the effectiveness of commonly used protection strategies required an expanded study
design, and included forest conservation projects in 8 states.
Publications:
Blanchard, Jon, Naikoa Aguilar-Amuchastegui and Robert Sutter. 2009. Forest Conservation
Strategy Effectiveness Study (FoCoSES): Year 1 Report. Durham, North Carolina, Southern
Resource Office, The Nature Conservancy
Sutter, Robert, Jon Blanchard and Naikoa Aguilar-Amuchastegui. 2009. Evaluating
the Conservation Outcomes of the International Paper Forest Acquisition Project:
Year 2 Monitoring Report. Durham, North Carolina, Southern Resource Office, The
Nature Conservancy
Wiens, John, Robert Sutter, Mark Anderson, Jon Blanchard, Analie Barnett, Naikoa
Aguilar-Amuchastegui, Chadwick Avery and Stephen Laine. 2009. Selecting and conserving
lands for biodiversity: the role of remote sensing. Remote Sensing of Environment,
113: 1370-1381.
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