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American Black Duck Partner Website
 
WLFW West Newsletters
Working Lands for Wildlife (WLFW) is the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service’s premier approach for conserving America’s working lands to benefit people, wildlife and rural communities.
NOAA FireBird Newsletters
The Firebird Project brings together a variety of stakeholders to address waterbird conservation along the Gulf Coast.
Southeast Climate Adaptation Science Center Newsletter
Latest news, events, and opportunities from the Southeast Climate Adaptation Science Center.
Southern Fire Exchange Fire Lines
Bimonthly newsletter of the Southern Fire Exchange.
Southern Fire Exchange Fire Lines
 
NOAA FireBird Newsletters
 
What Can I Do here
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Help Text for AquaCorridor Handbook
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New Songbird Habitat Study Unlocks Benefits for the Monarch Butterfly
A new study reveals that managing habitat for songbirds like the golden-winged warbler also benefits insect pollinators like the at-risk monarch butterfly.
USDA Forest Service Private Land
Did you know that more than half the forest land in the United States is owned and managed by some 10.6 million private forest owners? These working forests benefit us all.
Resources
 
Landsat’s Role in Managing Wildland Fires
Worldwide, fire plays a critical role in maintaining healthy forests, but fire can also be damaging. Homes are destroyed and the effects on air quality can be felt for miles. Forest fires are occurring more often and with greater intensity than in years past, and Landsat plays a critical role in understanding the impact. Landsat data enables land managers and scientists to assess the severity and extent of large fires as they plan recovery efforts; to improve safety and prevent damage to life, property and natural resources; to estimate how much pollution burning releases into the air; and to monitor the post-fire recovery of burned areas.
Driptorch Digest
A Newsletter for the Southern Prescribed Fire Community
NOAA Firebird Project
The NOAA Firebird Project is focused on understanding how prescribed fire practices affect populations of black and yellow rails and mottled ducks in high marsh across the U.S. Gulf States, during the breeding and non-breeding seasons.
Register and submit abstracts for the 2025 SE Drought and Aquatic Ecosystems Workshop
January 7-9, 2025
Science Seminar Sept 17: New Project Lightning Talks
Researcher + partner pairs talk about their newly funded projects for FY24.
Conservation Corridor Newsletters
Our mission is to bridge the science and practice of conservation corridors.