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Planning for Biodiversity - Bringing Research and Management Together (Paperback)
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Planning for Biodiversity - Bringing Research and Management Together (Paperback)
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The U.S. Geological Survey and the USDA Forest Service partnered to
co-host a symposium on "Planning for Biodiversity: Bringing
Research and Management Together," held February 29-March 2, 2000
at the Kellogg West Conference Center, California State Polytechnic
University in Pomona, California. The goal of the 3-day conference
was to identify the current status of our knowledge and gaps in our
understanding of regional biodiversity and ecosystem processes,
present and future threats to species and habitats, and effective
monitoring strategies for southwestern and central coastal
California resources. Through a program of 52 invited
presentations, 18 contributed posters, and 10 focused discussion
groups, the conference created an environment for formal and
informal communication among the 300 attendees about the results of
scientific studies and their application to resource conservation
and management, as well as the information needs of managers
responsible for determining and implementing management on the
ground. Of the 45 technical papers presented at the conference, 14
are included in this volume. Authors were asked to synthesize the
current state of knowledge regarding their topic and identify areas
needing future research. Each paper was assigned to an editor for
review and received one to three additional peer reviews. Expanded
abstracts of nine posters also were reviewed by the editors and
included. The topics addressed in the papers and poster abstracts
reflect the breadth of the conference presentations and the issues
facing the science and management communities, ranging from the
threats of fire, air pollution, grazing, exotic species invasion,
and habitat loss on native habitats and sensitive species of birds,
mammals, reptiles and amphibians, to the role of mycorrhizal fungi
as indicators of biological change.
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