11 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Environmental assessment : National Marine Fisheries Service proposed HMSC Newport facility, Newport, Oregon : draft
Fanno Creek Park master plan summary : City of Tigard, Oregon
24 pp. Bookmarks supplied by UO. Includes maps and figures. Adopted April 23, 2003. Captured January 19, 2007.The Fanno Creek Park Master Plan is an analysis of one section of the
Fanno Creek Greenway Trail system just east of Hall Boulevard and directly
abutting property to the south planned for the development of a new Library
for the City of Tigard....
The Fanno Creek Greenway Trail, itself, has been in planning and implementation
for years and extends in sections over 15 miles from the Tualatin
River to Willamette Park in Portland. Over half of the trail has been completed,
utilizing a mixture of on-street and off-street routing. The Fanno
Creek Park Master Plan helps fill in a missing link in this greenway trail,
extending the park beyond Hall Boulevard toward its destination at the
Tualatin. [From the Plan
Environmental Reviews and Case Studies: The Council on Environmental Quality at 40: A Life-Cycle Analysis
Using Net Wetland Loss, Current Wetland Condition, and Planned Future Watershed Condition for Wetland Conservation Prioritization, Tampa Bay Watershed, Florida
The Tampa Bay Watershed is emblematic of moderately sized coastal watersheds in the US: one-third of the wetlands were lost between the 1950s and 2007; numerous wetland remain, though many have been impacted; most remaining wetlands are hydrologically connected to downgradient waters; there are future constraints to wetland conservation; and the spatial complexity of these factors make it difficult to coordinate watershed-scale wetland conservation planning. Therefore, the Tampa Bay Watershed can serve as a model system for studying coordinated watershed-scale wetland conservation planning. The development of a technical framework requires that spatially explicit information be obtained, analyzed, and organized so customizable queries can be run by stakeholder agencies. Our approach does so by using readily available data to create a geodatabase organized into a set of screening layers that can be intersected hierarchically to identify areas where wetland preservation and restoration might be best used to accomplish overarching goals. Our approach was developed in conjunction with stakeholder input and is currently being integrated into a coordinated watershed-scale wetland conservation effort
Using Net Wetland Loss, Current Wetland Condition, and Planned Future Watershed Condition for Wetland Conservation Planning and Prioritization, Tampa Bay Watershed, Florida
The Tampa Bay Watershed is emblematic of moderately sized coastal watersheds in the US, particularly along the Gulf Coast: one-third of the wetlands were lost between the 1950s and 2007; numerous wetland remain, though many have been impacted; most of the remaining wetlands are hydrologically connected to downstream wetlands and waterbodies; there are future constraints to wetland conservation; and the spatial complexity of these factors make it difficult to coordinate watershed-scale wetland conservation planning. Therefore, the Tampa Bay Watershed can serve as a model system for studying ways to coordinate watershed-scale wetland conservation planning efforts. The development of a technical framework to support coordinated, watershed-scale wetland conservation planning requires that spatially explicit information be obtained, analyzed, and organized so customizable queries can be run by stakeholder agencies. The approach described herein does so by using readily available data to create a geodatabase organized into a set of screening layers that can be intersected hierarchically to identify areas where wetland preservation and restoration might be best used to accomplish overarching goals. The information and tools described herein were developed in conjunction with stakeholder input and are in the process of being integrated into a watershed master plan for freshwater wetland conservation
