Southeast Regional Assessment Project (SERAP): Assessing Global Change Impacts on Natural and Human Systems in the Southeast
Completed
By Climate Adaptation Science Centers
December 31, 2010
The Southeastern United States spans a broad range of physiographic settings and maintains exceptionally high levels of faunal diversity. Unfortunately, many of these ecosystems are increasingly under threat due to rapid human development, and management agencies are increasingly aware of the potential effects that climate change will have on these ecosystems. Natural resource managers and conservation planners can be effective at preserving ecosystems in the face of these stressors only if they can adapt current conservation efforts to increase the overall resilience of the system. Climate change, in particular, challenges many of the basic assumptions used by conservation planners and managers. Previous conservation planning efforts identified and prioritized areas for conservation based on the current environmental conditions, such as habitat quality, and assumed that conditions in conservation lands would be largely controlled by management actions (including no action). Climate change, however, will likely alter important system drivers (temperature, precipitation, and sea-level rise) and make it difficult, if not impossible, to maintain recent historic conditions in conservation lands into the future. Climate change will also influence the future conservation potential of non-conservation lands, further complicating conservation planning. Therefore, there is a need to develop and adapt effective conservation strategies to cope with the effects of climate and landscape change on future environmental conditions
- Source: USGS Sciencebase (id: 54c2c1c5e4b043905e018557)
Robert Jacobson, PhD (Former Employee)
Supervisory Research Hydrologist
Supervisory Research Hydrologist
Roland J Viger
Chief, Geo-Intelligence Branch
Chief, Geo-Intelligence Branch
Email
Phone
Nathaniel Plant, Ph.D.
Center Director
Center Director
Email
Phone
Max Post van der Burg, PhD
Chief - Spatial and Ecological Analytics Branch
Chief - Spatial and Ecological Analytics Branch
Phone
Mary Freeman, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Research Ecologist
Research Ecologist
Glenn Guntenspergen, Ph.D.
Research Ecologist
Research Ecologist
Phone
Nathaniel (Nate) Booth
Senior Advisor, Office of the Chief Operating Officer
Senior Advisor, Office of the Chief Operating Officer
Email
Phone
Adam Terando, Ph.D.
Research Ecologist, Southeast CASC
Research Ecologist, Southeast CASC
Email
Phone
Jaime Collazo, PhD
Research Wildlife Biologist
Research Wildlife Biologist
Email
Phone
The Southeastern United States spans a broad range of physiographic settings and maintains exceptionally high levels of faunal diversity. Unfortunately, many of these ecosystems are increasingly under threat due to rapid human development, and management agencies are increasingly aware of the potential effects that climate change will have on these ecosystems. Natural resource managers and conservation planners can be effective at preserving ecosystems in the face of these stressors only if they can adapt current conservation efforts to increase the overall resilience of the system. Climate change, in particular, challenges many of the basic assumptions used by conservation planners and managers. Previous conservation planning efforts identified and prioritized areas for conservation based on the current environmental conditions, such as habitat quality, and assumed that conditions in conservation lands would be largely controlled by management actions (including no action). Climate change, however, will likely alter important system drivers (temperature, precipitation, and sea-level rise) and make it difficult, if not impossible, to maintain recent historic conditions in conservation lands into the future. Climate change will also influence the future conservation potential of non-conservation lands, further complicating conservation planning. Therefore, there is a need to develop and adapt effective conservation strategies to cope with the effects of climate and landscape change on future environmental conditions
- Source: USGS Sciencebase (id: 54c2c1c5e4b043905e018557)
Robert Jacobson, PhD (Former Employee)
Supervisory Research Hydrologist
Supervisory Research Hydrologist
Roland J Viger
Chief, Geo-Intelligence Branch
Chief, Geo-Intelligence Branch
Email
Phone
Nathaniel Plant, Ph.D.
Center Director
Center Director
Email
Phone
Max Post van der Burg, PhD
Chief - Spatial and Ecological Analytics Branch
Chief - Spatial and Ecological Analytics Branch
Phone
Mary Freeman, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Research Ecologist
Research Ecologist
Glenn Guntenspergen, Ph.D.
Research Ecologist
Research Ecologist
Phone
Nathaniel (Nate) Booth
Senior Advisor, Office of the Chief Operating Officer
Senior Advisor, Office of the Chief Operating Officer
Email
Phone
Adam Terando, Ph.D.
Research Ecologist, Southeast CASC
Research Ecologist, Southeast CASC
Email
Phone
Jaime Collazo, PhD
Research Wildlife Biologist
Research Wildlife Biologist
Email
Phone