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This webinar was conducted as part of the Climate Change Science and Management Webinar series, hosted in partnership by the USGS National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center and the FWS National Conservation Training Center. 

Frameworks for evaluating the vulnerability of multiple species to decline or extinction are increasingly needed by state and local agencies that are tasked with managing many species at once. USGS researchers in the Northwestern U.S. are looking at the “sensitivity” of wildlife species to climate change, which is a fundamental component of vulnerability, for freshwater fishes, amphibians, and reptiles native to the state of Oregon. They have evaluated species-level data across a large spectrum of geographic range sizes and climate sensitivity. 

Their results suggest that a combination of classifications based on species’ range sizes (the area they occupy) and their traits (e.g., body size, generation time, and investment in offspring) offer a promising foundation for regional multispecies conservation planning, particularly for species researchers know little about. Specifically, this framework can help identify focal species for monitoring and highlight priority species for which exposure to climate change and other threats should be assessed. 

 

Media Record Details

Sep 22, 2016
Meryl Mims

Cataloging Information

Topic(s):
Fire & Climate

NRFSN number: 14862
Record updated: