Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Robin O'Malley the new Policy & Partnership Coordinator for the USGS National Climate Change & Wildlife Science Center


Robin O'Malley joined the U.S. Geological Survey this week to serve as the policy and partnership coordinator for the USGS National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center.
O’Malley comes to the USGS from the H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economic and the Environment, where he was the Director of Program Development. Previously he directed the Heinz Center’s Environmental Reporting Program, which published The State of the Nation’s Ecosystems: Measuring the Lands, Waters, and Living Resources of the United States in 2002 and 2008.
O’Malley will focus on science and resource management partnerships instrumental to the center’s success. Dr. Susan Haseltine, associate director of biology at USGS, said O’Malley’s expertise is ideally suited for the job.
“Climate change crosses jurisdictional boundaries, so to be effective in planning for and reducing the effects of climate change on our natural resources, we must work with partners from many agencies and organizations,” Haseltine said. “With his background, passion, and solid reputation in the ecological and wildlife conservation community, Robin will help build those partnerships in a timely, effective manner.”
O’Malley has extensive experience in the Department of the Interior (DOI), where he led government efforts to establish a biodiversity information network throughout the Americas. From 1993 to 1996, he was chief of staff for the National Biological Survey, where he was responsible for many program development and implementation activities, as well as budgeting and outreach. O’Malley also served as a special assistant to former Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt; a DOI deputy science advisor; an associate director for natural resources at the White House Council on Environmental Quality; and a senior environmental advisor to Governor Thomas H. Kean of New Jersey.
He holds a master’s degree from Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government and a bachelor's degree from the State University of New York.
The USGS National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center was funded by Congress in 2008 to improve the capacity of fish and wildlife agencies to respond to climate change. The center’s research addresses high-priority climate change effects on fish and wildlife.



USGS provides science for a changing world. For more information, visit www.usgs.gov.
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Friday, December 18, 2009

Decision Making in the Face of Scientific Uncertainty: Adaptive Management for Climate Change

An Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies Workshop 
2010 North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference  
Milwaukee, WI 
8am-12pm March 22nd

Resource managers are often required to make tough decisions, especially when the science is uncertain. However, these decisions must be defensible if called into question. It is often unclear what the full impact of an environmental problem will be and what kind of impacts (both intended and unintended) the solution may have. There is growing scientific consensus that a major shift in climate is underway worldwide, with profound implications for natural resource management. Adaptation to climate change will be an especially challenging issue for management agencies because decisions will be made, in many cases, based on an incomplete understanding of climate change impacts, particularly at the local level. Adaptive management and structured decision making are critical tools for making management decisions with incomplete information and high levels of uncertainty. Adaptive management allows decision making to proceed even in the face of profound uncertainty about outcomes by treating management decisions as testable hypotheses. Structured decision making is a decision analysis process that can help overcome challenges by breaking down difficult decisions such that a decision can be acceptable to a broad range of stakeholders.

Recognizing the importance of these tools, the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies Science & Research Committee is developing a series of workshops for state fish and wildlife agencies to provide them with the tools for making decisions in a scientifically defensible manner. The first workshop at the 2009 North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference focused on using adaptive management and structured decision making for invasive species management. For the second workshop the Science & Research Committee, in collaboration with the Associations Climate Change Committee, will co-sponsor a workshop to present how adaptive management and the structured decision making process can be used to address local climate change adaptation issues and can also be built into State Wildlife Action Plans revisions, as well as revisions for other plans, for climate change adaptation. The workshop will use local examples to demonstrate how adaptive management and structured decision making can be used for climate change-based, natural resource issues.

The workshop will be held at the 2010 North American Wildlife & Natural Resources Conference in Milwaukee, WI on the morning (8am-12pm) of March 22nd. The National Wildlife Federations Climate Change Town Hall meeting will follow in the afternoon to complete a day of climate change discussions.

If you have any questions please contact Dr. Arpita Choudhury at achoudhury@fishwildlife.org

Thursday, December 10, 2009

California 2009 Climate Adaptation Strategy


Governor Schwarzenegger Releases First-Of-Its-Kind Comprehensive Climate Strategy, Announces Climate Adaptation Advisory Panel And Unveils Google-Earth Based Applications to Show Climate Change Risks

California's Climate Adaptation Strategy (CAS) final report, a first-of-its-kind comprehensive, multi-sector analysis will enhance the state's management of climate impacts from sea level rise, increased temperatures, shifting precipitation and extreme natural events.  The CAS final report summarizes the latest science on how climate change could impact the state and provides recommendations on how to manage against those threats. It focuses on seven different sectors – public health, biodiversity and habitat, ocean and coastal resources, water management, agriculture, forestry, and transportation and energy infrastructure - and lays out several recommendations focused on reducing climate risks to people, the environment and infrastructure.

The CAS report and recommendations can be found on the state's climate change portal at www.climatechange.ca.gov <http://www.climatechange.ca.gov> .

The creation of the Climate Adaptation Advisory Panel, in partnership with the Pacific Council on International Relations, will further assess California's climate change risks and help develop a set of independent adaptation recommendations to implement CAS: 

-The independent, non- partisan group will build off the CAS final report focusing on three key hazards that are most likely to have increasing impact on California as the climate changes 

-These include increased wildfires and extended fire seasons, rising sea levels along 1,100 miles of coastline and reduced availability of water with reduced snow pack in the Sierras and extended periods of drought

-The panel, made up of 23 prominent business, labor, government and private sector leaders, will develop recommendations for consideration by the Governor and his administration, the Legislature and other stakeholders in July 2010

Additionally, the Governor unveiled two new Google-Earth based applications that will allow Californians to see the risks of climate change impacts in their communities:

-Setting the standard for displaying and transferring climate change information, the Cal-Adapt prototype application will allow users to explore the risks of global warming in California and help make better-informed localized adaptation decisions

-Funded by the California Energy Commission and Google.org, the Stockholm Environmental Institute has also developed a Web site using the Google-Earth platform to display an interactive tour on climate change 

-Users can access these Google-Earth based applications through visiting the state's climate change portal at www.climatechange.ca.gov/adaptation <http://www.climatechange.ca.gov/adaptation>

Background:

-Gov. Schwarzenegger signed Executive Order S-13-08 <http://gov.ca.gov/press-release/11035/> in November 2008, which directed the Natural Resources Agency to identify how state agencies can respond to rising temperatures, changing precipitation patterns, sea level rise, and extreme natural events associated with climate change

-The Natural Resources Agency has worked with state agencies (California Emergency Management Agency; California Environmental Protection Agency; Business, Transportation and Housing Agency; Health and Human Services Agency; California Office of Information Security and the California Department of Food and Agriculture) during the last two years to develop the CAS

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Council of Environmental Quality Interagency Committee on Climate Change Adaptation State Agency Listening Session

BACKGROUND
An Interagency Climate Change Adaptation Group under the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) with assistance from the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has been tasked to consider the capabilities of the Federal government to respond to the impacts of climate change across various critical sectors, institutions, and agencies. Five initial working groups (science policy, agency process, water, insurance, and international assistance) will review existing policies, operations, procedures, and other tools that affect the Federal government’s response, and suggest options for improving the government’s capacity for adaptation to climate change.
The Agency Adaptation Workgroup is tasked with identifying approaches for agencies in climate change adaptation planning related to internal agency operations, policies, and processes. It will also identify agency-level operational activities necessary to assess climate risks and plan, implement, monitor, and evaluate the effectiveness of these activities prospectively. A critical component of the work of this group will be identifying opportunities for actions by agencies that reduce risks, facilitate resilience, and build adaptive capacity. The workgroup is charged with developing a report to the Interagency Committee by the end of the year. The report will include recommendations on adaptation planning and implementation, encompassing intra-agency and inter-agency considerations. It will summarize the key issues, the Federal government’s capabilities, and challenges in responding to climate change, suggest possible improvements in the Federal government’s capacity for climate change adaptation, and recommend policy and other options for consideration by the Interagency Committee.
State Agency Listening Session Overview
The workgroup held a series of “listening sessions” with local, state, and tribal governments and private sector partners. The purpose was to engage stakeholders involved in related planning processes and gather input on how federal agencies can work with partners to design and implement adaptation plans. During these sessions, participants were asked to consider the following questions:
· How did you approach your climate adaptation planning and implementation process? What worked well? What didn’t?
· What were the key programs, policies or other activities that supported and guided your adaptation planning and implementation?
· How did you coordinate with other organizations, governments and businesses?
· Are there key programs, policies, or other actions that Federal agencies should adopt to support or guide their climate change adaptation planning?
· Are there adaptation planning and implementation resources, studies or reports that the workgroup should consider in its work?
On the 16th of November, 2009 the workgroup held a listening session in the Truman Room of the White House Conference Center for State Fish & Wildlife Agencies on their work with State Adaptation Strategies. A teleconference line was made available for those who could not attend in person. Each state participant was given time to answer the questions listed above. States that could not participate in the Listening Session are encouraged to email their replies to AgencyAdaptation@ceq.eop.gov with the subject line: “(organization) listening session-(Date).” Comments are still welcome by the workgroup.
Common Themes
One of the common threads throughout the listening session was the lack of coordination and communication among federal agencies. There is also a perception of competition among state agencies to be the first to move ahead in climate change impact assessment and adaptation planning. Several state participants reported that there is confusion within their agency about the roles of many federal agencies within the framework of climate change adaptation. This lack of coordination translates into lack of communication with state agencies as well as support and guidance on critical issues.
Several states indicated that a national adaptation strategy would be essential for future adaptation planning particularly as states are beginning to update their State Wildlife Action Plans (SWAPs) for climate change.
In addition, a few states mentioned the need for adaptive management training for state agencies. Adaptive management and structured decision-making are important tools that state agencies need to be more comfortable practicing, particularly when managing for climate change.
Overview of State Participants Adaptation Activities and Challenges
California
-CA Adaptation Plan-The multi-sector plan involved close participation by stakeholder groups which helped create an open and transparent process. CA Department of Natural Resources was a key player in the creation of this document. The final version will be out for release soon: http://www.climatechange.ca.gov/adaptation/
-California DFG is also co-chair (with Nevada) of the WAFWA climate change committee.
Idaho
-Idaho is just beginning to coordinate and plan for climate change adaptation.
-They are working with USFWS on the Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative (Oregon, Washington, Montana, and Wyoming are also participating in that project): http://www.fws.gov/science/SHC/pdf/DoIGreatNorthernLCCNarrative10092008.pdf
Pennsylvania
-Pennsylvania’s Governor created a Climate Change Advisory Council to begin drafting an adaptation plan. The plan, which crosses sectors, is currently under review.
-The Fish & Boating Commission and the Wildlife Commission are beginning to update their SWAP. At this time they are uncertain if it will be a large or small update.
Missouri
-The need for information on which parts of SWAPs would be most useful to federal agencies and partners was identified.
-Missouri is trying to determine how to integrate agriculture and wildlife agencies respective adaptation plans.
Alaska
- Alaska has formed a Sub-cabinet on Climate Change to prepare an Alaska climate change strategy which consists of an Adaptation Workgroup and a Mitigation Workgroup: http://www.climatechange.alaska.gov/
-Alaska Department of Fish and Game has also formed a Think Tank to identify likely impacts to fish and wildlife.
Oregon
-Oregon is currently updating their SWAPs for climate change.
-Oregon also has an online Fish & Wildlife adaptation strategy: http://www.dfw.state.or.us/conservationstrategy/docs/preparing_oregons_fish_wildllife%20.pdf
Minnesota
-Minnesota created a strategic plan in 2009 on energy and climate for their agency that identifies adaptation and mitigation strategies.
-A new inter agency adaptation team was created and will host a Climate Change Adaptation Summit in December to identify what the research and policy needs are for the state.
Wisconsin
-The WI DNR, in partnership with the University of Wisconsin and other state agencies and institutions are part of the Wisconsin Initiative on Climate Change Impacts (WICCI). This taskforce consists of a science council, advisory committees, and 18 different working groups that assesses and anticipates climate change impacts on Wisconsin’s different sectors. The taskforce has downscaled climate models to the local level for WI: http://www.wicci.wisc.edu/
-The WICCI will be releasing an Assessment Report in 2010 that recommends adaptation strategies that can be implemented by different sectors.
Vermont
-Vermont is working with their cooperative units on data processing and analysis to develop an adaptation management framework.
-They are working with different partners on biodiversity and connectivity.
Massachusetts
-For the past year and a half Massachusetts has worked with Manomet to identify vulnerable habitats through an expert panel process. These habits are identified in their SWAPs.
-They are now in the process of developing adaptation planning for the state across all sectors.
-The MA DFW is also a member of the Climate Change and Wildlife Alliance-Massachusetts: http://www.climateandwildlife.org/
Nevada
-Nevada is working with partners to rewrite their SWAPs. They are using the AFWA Guidance Document for that process as well.
-NatureServe will be hosting a workshop in NV on the use of the NatureServe Vulnerability Index: http://www.natureserve.org/prodServices/climatechange/ClimateChange.jsp
New York
-The Governor drafted an Executive Order for an action plan across all sectors for adaptation and mitigation.
-New York also has a Sea Level Task Force that is creating recommendations for state legislation as it pertains to sea level rise.
Texas
-Texas has no formal committees or task force for climate change.
-They will be updating their SWAPs for climate change.
-TWRP is working with Katherine Heyhoe from Texas Tech and the coop units to leverage resources.
Summarized notes by Arpita Choudhury, Science & Research Liaison for the Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Efforts to understand and respond to effects of climate change on Minnesota Lakes



Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Section of Fisheries are partnering with other federal and state agencies, academia, local units of government, and citizen volunteers to better understand and respond to the potential effects of climate change on Minnesota’s glacial lake resources and fish communities.

The first effort is dubbed “Sustaining Lakes in a Changing Environment” or SLICE. SLICE is designed to understand, predict, and respond to the outcomes of major drivers of change such as development, agriculture, invasive species, and climate change on lake habitats and fish populations. Climate change has the potential to exacerbate the harmful effects of other watershed or in-lake perturbations. We are exploring processes and mechanisms at the watershed scale that drive patterns in water quality and fish habitat in a diverse set of 24 sentinel lake watersheds spread across the state’s major land types (See Lake Map).


Our approach is to augment ongoing ‘snapshot’ data collection efforts in many MN lakes with an intensive focus to understand processes in a few representative sentinel systems. This represents a novel and promising direction in water resource and fisheries management. Further, cooperation with multiple entities charged with aquatic resource management ensures rigor (e.g., the right people doing the job), efficiency, relevance, and shared ownership in common-held goals.

The first phase of SLICE runs from 2008 – 2011. Partners are collecting comprehensive datasets on watershed stressors, water quality, zooplankton, aquatic plants, and fish populations. These datasets are informing comprehensive baseline reports for each sentinel lake to form the foundation of future explorations. Analysis teams will also be busy in 2011-2012 identifying a set of lake habitat and fish indicators that exhibit little natural variability but respond predictably across a gradient of lake habitat conditions. These results will be used to set a long-term monitoring schedule; moving SLICE into its implementation phase.

Minnesota DNR Fisheries is also participating in a large-scale research project sponsored by the United States Geological Survey (USGS) focused on the effects of climate change on fish habitat. DNR Fisheries researchers will team up with the Natural Resources Research Institute (NRRI) at the University of Minnesota (Duluth) to investigate the effects of climate and land use change on cisco (tullibees) in a number of Minnesota lakes. Populations of cisco in Minnesota are especially vulnerable to climate change, because the state is in the southern part of the species range. A requirement for cold, well oxygenated water make cisco an excellent indicator species for understanding the effects of climate change on many of our deeper lakes in the state.

The USGS National Climate Change and Wildlife Climate Center (http://nccw.usgs.gov/) is funding this research so state management agencies can develop climate change adaptation strategies. Deep lakes with exceptional water quality will be specifically targeted because they will represent important sanctuaries for coldwater fish in a climate-warmed Minnesota. After identifying these potential refuge lakes, watershed protection efforts can be initiated that will protect these systems from any additional nutrient enrichment that would likely exacerbate climate-induced losses of cisco thermal habitat. Landscape ecologists at NRRI will assist with modeling the effects of climate and land use change on cisco habitat using newly developed, downscaled climate and land use projections that allow for analysis at very high geographic resolutions. Results of the Minnesota cisco study will be integrated with the analyses of several other state, federal, and university research partners who will be studying the effects of climate and land use change on fish habitat in the Rocky Mountain West, Desert Southwest, and Northeast US. The research will allow state management agencies like the Minnesota DNR to develop strategies that strengthen the resilience of fish habitat in lakes and streams against the effects of climate change.

For further information regarding SLICE contact SLICE coordinator Ray Valley ray.valley@state.mn.us

For further information regarding The Cooperative USGS climate change grant contact Peter Jacobson peter.jacobson@state.mn.us


Monday, October 26, 2009

Virginia Board of Game and Inland Fisheries Endorses New Climate Change Strategy Document

Virginia’s Wildlife Action Plan identifies more than 900 species that are being impacted by the loss or degradation of their habitats. Many of these species could become extinct or extirpated from the Commonwealth if steps are not taken to reverse these trends. In coming decades, climate change will exacerbate and intensify many of the existing threats and will likely result in new sets of impacts and stressors. Virginia’s Strategy for Safeguarding Virginia’s Species of Greatest Conservation Need from the Effects of Climate Change was created to provide initial guidance on actions Virginia’s conservation community can implement immediately to enhance the conservation of wildlife and habitats in the face of climate change while more comprehensive adaptation strategies are developed. Conservation strategies include specific actions for conserving species and habitats, developing new data and climate modeling resources, and implementing new outreach efforts related to climate change. The document was prepared by the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fish, National Wildlife Federation, and Virginia Conservation Network with funding provided by Wildlife Conservation Society’s Wildlife Action Opportunities Fund and USFWS’s State Wildlife Grants Program.

For more information please contact Chris Burkett: Chris.Burkett@dgif.virginia.gov

Friday, October 23, 2009

Montana' Department of Fish, Wildlife & Parks convene 1st Meeting of their Climate Adaptation Working Group

The State of Montana's Department of Fish Wildlife and Parks (MFWP) convened its first meeting of its Climate Adaptation Working Group on October 16, 2009 in Helena Montana. There were 21 participants representing government and the NGO community. Montana's Climate Adaptation Working Group is the result of the State's effort to implement the Western Governors Association Wildlife Corridor Initiative and comes just after the State has compiled its new Crucial Areas and Connectivity Assessment, now provisionally called the Montana Decision Support System.

Some of the highlights from this first meeting include:

1. Building the architecture for a robust plan. Given the fact this is the first plan for the State, that climate predictions are still imprecise at the fine scale, and that capacity and resources to perform detailed modeling and monitoring for the entire State, all its biodiversity, and all ecoregions is limited, this group aspires to build a planning framework to insert climate data and climate impacts as information comes online and is refined. The building blocks for the plan include the the Montana Decision Support System; regional information from ongoing or planned efforts in the Crown of the Continent, Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, the Northern Great Plains; federal efforts to assess climate impacts on public lands; statewide climate data efforts with the University of Montana, NatureServe, the Nature Conservancy and US Geologic Survey; and interstate efforts with the activities of the Western Governors Association, with NGOs that are working to connect planning efforts between states such as National Wildlife Federation and Defenders of Wildlife. The Working Group hopes to create the basic architecture of an initial plan that the State can refine as adaptation knowledge and resources come online over time (i.e., Montana Climate Adaptation Plan version 1.0).

2. Discreet tasks. The Working Group was subdivided into several smaller task teams with discreet objectives. The overall goal of the working group is to develop a plan to assess climate impacts and develop management recommendations for conserving species, habitats and ecological processes in Montana based on observed and expected impacts. As such, task groups looking at species, habitat and ecological process exposure to climate change were established (i.e., vulnerability risk assessment). Other task groups include data collection, climate modeling, outreach (to the Governor's office, to other states and to federal partners), and Working Group coordination.

For more information please contact: Amielle DeWan at adewan@defenders.org


Thursday, October 22, 2009

GAO Climate Change Adaptation Report

The U.S. Government Accountability Office report, "Climate Change Adaptation: Strategic Federal Planning Could Help Government Officials Make More Informed Decisions," GAO-10-113, is now published. Please see links below for the report and the hearing held today by Chairman Ed Markey of the U.S. House of Representatives Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming.

http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d10113.pdf



http://globalwarming.house.gov/pubs?id=0011

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

US Fish & Wildlife Service Draft Climate Change Strategic Plan is Available for Public Comment

US Fish & Wildlife Service Draft Climate Change Strategic Plan is Available for Public Comment

The US Fish and Wildlife Service released the draft versions of their Climate Change Strategic Plan and 5-Year Action Plan for public comment today. Please consider taking the time to look over both documents and submitting comments to USFWS for your state fish and wildlife agency. It is essential that the Service receive your individual input on their Plan. Comments are due by the 23rd of November, 2009. To view the plan electronically, upload your comments, and find out more about Service efforts to address climate change, visit: http://www.fws.gov/home/climatechange/
Please see USFWS Director Sam Hamilton’s note below for more details.

“I’m pleased to notify you that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Draft Climate Change Strategic Plan is available for your review and comment. The plan, which has been in development for more than a year, is intended to guide our agency’s actions over the next several years as we work to respond to the unprecedented challenge of accelerating climate change. The Service’s Strategic Plan complements the Department of the Interior’s Secretarial Order issued last week, calling for unprecedented collaboration, coordination, and information sharing among Department agencies in response to the threat of accelerated climate change. The plan outlines more specifically what the Service proposes to do to fulfill our responsibilities under the Secretarial Order.

To adequately respond to long-term climate changes, the Service is moving to establish regional climate science partnerships with the U.S. Geological Survey, other federal agencies, state fish and wildlife agencies and the conservation community, to expand our ability to turn continental climate science into knowledge that managers can use to make better decisions on the ground. We will establish landscape-level partnerships taking advantage of expertise across the conservation community to set population and habitat goals, plan and execute conservation across landscapes, and enhance our research, monitoring and evaluation tools through the establishment of a National Biological Inventory and Monitoring Partnership.

We truly value your perspective, and would appreciate your ideas and suggestions for how we can improve the plan and work together to make a difference for fish and wildlife in North America and across the globe.”

Sincerely,
Sam

Sam Hamilton
Director
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

For more information please contact Gary Taylor at gtaylor@fishwildlife.org or Dr. Arpita Choudhury at achoudhury@fishwildlife.org

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

California Department of Fish and Game’s Climate Change Web Page Update

The California Department of Fish and Game’s Climate Change Web Page has been updated with new information:

-Stakeholder meeting: Information and power points presentations from the September 3rd stakeholder meeting are available at http://dfg.ca.gov/climatechange/activities/stakeholders-meeting.asp

-WAFWA: Information on the Department's activities related to the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife agencies (WAFWA)-specifically the WAFWA climate change committee can be viewed at http://dfg.ca.gov/climatechange/wafwa/. This site contains the 2009 update on climate change activities in all the western states and provinces. The PowerPoint presentations from the plenary session will be online soon.

For more information please contact Amber Pairis at: apairis@dfg.ca.gov

Or go to: http://dfg.ca.gov/climatechange/

Friday, September 11, 2009

National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center Announces 2009 Research Awards

The USGS National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center (NCCWSC) announces the suite of science projects that will be funded under its Fiscal Year 2009 Request for Proposals. Seventeen projects were selected from among the 175 proposals through a rigorous review process. As part of the NCCWSC’s science portfolio, these multiyear projects will greatly advance our understanding of how climate change may affect our Nation's wildlife, fish, and terrestrial and aquatic habitats.

The award announcement and list of proposals is available at the NCCWSC web site: http://nccw.usgs.gov/

For information contact Robin Schrock at: robin_schrock@usgs.gov

NY DEC Workshop Examines Climate Change Effects on Fish, Wildlife and Natural Systems

DEC's Division of Fish, Wildlife and Marine Resources and its conservation partners recently hosted a workshop entitled, Safeguarding New York's Wildlife and Natural Systems in a Changing Climate. The meeting was designed to provide a basic understanding of current climate change science and legislation, already occurring fish, wildlife and natural system adaptations, and how DEC can work collaboratively with its conservation partners in response to future adaptation needs.

More than 100 people attended the very successful workshop, held at DEC's Central Office in Albany. In addition, more than 100 participated via video-conference at 14 DEC regional offices throughout the state, and via a National Wildlife Federation (NWF) webinar link. Several DEC divisions were represented, as well as several other state agencies, the Governor's Office, federal agencies, many non-governmental organizations, and academia. The workshop was funded by a grant to NWF from the Doris Duke Foundation.

Climate change is one of the most significant challenges facing natural resources management, and one of DEC's priorities as expressed by Commissioner Pete Grannis. Changes in climate will lead to potentially dramatic changes in environmental conditions, which will in turn cause changes in fish and wildlife populations and habitat. As a result, DEC and its conservation partners need to factor climate change adaptations by fish, wildlife and natural systems into resource management decisions.

As a result of the workshop, strong interest was expressed in building a coalition to develop and implement fish, wildlife and natural systems adaptation strategies for New York, as well as determining the focus of future adaptation workshops.

For more information contact Tracey Tomajer at tmtomaje@gw.dec.state.ny.us

http://www.dec.ny.gov/energy/44992.html

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Observations from the World Climate Conference-3

On Friday, September 11, 3:30- 4:30pm please sit in on a conversation with Dr. Jane Lubchenco, under secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator, about World Climate Conference-3. Dr. Lubchenco just returned from leading the U.S. Delegation to the conference last week in Geneva.


Hosted by the World Meteorological Organization, the conference, which brought together more than 2,000 climate scientists, sectoral experts and decision-makers, established a Global Framework for Climate Services to “strengthen production, availability, delivery and application of science-based climate prediction and services.”


Dr. Lubchenco will offer her observations and impressions from the conference, sharing some insights into the valuable collaboration and lessons learned from both the scientific segments, the meetings she attended and comments from heads of state from around the world. Climate change is a shared challenge, and this conference confirmed the pressing need for increased collaboration and coordination to improve the science and observations that support the development of climate information as well as the need to improve the coordination and delivery of climate information and services in all countries.


The call will be moderated by newly appointed NOAA Director of External Affairs, Andy Winer, and Dr. Lubchenco will take questions from participants.

Dial-in information:

Toll Free Number: 877-457-9382

International Number: 1-630-395-0031

Participant Passcode: CLIMATE

Please contact Jennifer Austin at 202-302-9047 if you have any questions.

For more information about the conference go to:

World Climate Conference 3 information: http://www.wmo.int/wcc3/page_en.php

NOAA homepage:

http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2009/20090904_wcc3closing.html