| PORTLAND, Ore. January
18, 2012. Resource managers at the nation’s 155 national
forests now have a set of science-based guidelines to help them
manage their landscapes for resilience to climate change.
Developed by the Forest Service’s western research stations,
the four-part framework details a practical and credible management
approach, grounded in strong partnerships between local resource
managers and scientists, that will help national forests meet their
management mandate. The guidelines are published in Responding
to Climate Change on National Forests: A Guidebook for Developing
Adaptation Options, a new report published by the U.S. Forest Service’s
Pacific Northwest Research Station.
“
This guide lays out an important foundation and provides useful,
real-life examples to help managers and citizens build their climate-smart
adaptive capacity,” said David Cleaves, the Forest Service’s
climate change advisor. “It will be an important source for
practices and tools for enhancing the future of our Nation’s
forests.”
Since 2008, when Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell
issued an agency-wide strategy for responding to climate change,
every national forest
across the country has been required to develop options to adapt
natural resource management to the potentially harmful effects
of a changing climate. Forests use an annual performance “scorecard” to
outline specific goals and objectives and to document their success
in meeting the framework’s direction.
The new adaptation
guidelines support this process by providing managers with specific
information about decision tools, models,
and planning
instruments and by offering guidance on setting priorities, assessing
resource vulnerabilities, and developing goals. Central to the
guidelines are four steps – reviewing, ranking, resolving, and observing – that
managers can follow to localize climate change science, evaluate
sensitivity of specific natural resources, develop adaptation options,
and monitor their effectiveness. This approach makes the guidebook
flexible enough to apply to all national forests, regardless of
which ecosystems they contain or what their management priorities
are.
“
There is no one ‘recipe’ for adapting to a warmer climate,
but there are things that can be done to build resilience and help
manage forests sustainably,” said David L. Peterson, a research
biologist with the station and the guidebook’s lead author. “The
adaptation guidebook provides a toolkit from which various tools
can be selected, all based on current science. We expect the toolkit
to evolve over time as we learn more about the effects of climate
change and about which adaptation techniques are effective.”
Peterson developed the guidelines along with counterparts from
the Forest Service’s Pacific Northwest, Pacific Southwest,
and Rocky Mountain Research Stations, with input from university
scientists and national forest resource managers.
The guidebook
is available online at http://www.treesearch.fs.fed.us/pubs/39884 and
in print by request. Printed copies can be requested by emailing
pnw_pnwpubs@fs.fed.us or calling (503) 261-1211 and referencing “PNW-GTR-855.”
____________________________________________________________________
The PNW Research Station is headquartered in Portland, Oregon.
It has 11 laboratories and centers located in Alaska, Oregon,
and Washington and about 425 employees.
|