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www.oregonstate.edu/inr/ilap MAKING INFORMED WILDLAND RESTORATION DECISIONS IN THE NORTHWEST AND SOUTHWEST INTEGRATED LANDSCAPE ASSESSMENT PROJECT March 15, 2011 Presentation by Janine Salwasser, Project Coordinator Agriculture, Food, Nutrition and Natural Resources R&D Round Table
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Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

Jun 27, 2015

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Integrated Landscape Assessment Project Presentation given at the Agriculture, Food, Nutrition and Natural Resources R&D Round Table in Washington, D.C. in March 2011. We were selected as one of eight exemplary collaborate research projects in the nation.
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Page 1: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

www.oregonstate.edu/inr/ilap

MAKING INFORMED WILDLAND

RESTORATION DECISIONS IN THE

NORTHWEST AND SOUTHWEST

INTEGRATED LANDSCAPE ASSESSMENT PROJECT

March 15, 2011

Presentation by

Janine Salwasser, Project Coordinator

Agriculture, Food, Nutrition and Natural Resources R&D Round Table

Page 2: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

LANDSCAPES

Photo of Blue Mountains landscape in Eastern Oregon by Miles Hemstrom, USFS-PNW

Page 3: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

• FEDERAL

• U.S. Forest Service

• PNW Research Station

• Rocky Mountain Research Station

• Region 3

• Region 6

• STATE

• Washington Dept. of Natural Resources

• Oregon Dept. of Forestry

• Arizona Division of Forestry

• Arizona Dept. of Game & Fish

• New Mexico Division of Forestry

• UNIVERSITY

• Institute for Natural Resources

• Oregon State University

• University of Washington

• University of New Mexico

• NGOs

• The Nature Conservancy

• Conservation Biology Institute

• Ecosystem Management, Inc.

• LOCAL GROUPS

• Tapash Collaborative (WA)

• Firescape Group (AZ)

PARTNERSHIPS

Page 4: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

JOBS

Photo of some ILAP team members on flanks of Mt. Hood, Oregon by Miles Hemstrom, USFS-PNW

Page 5: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

INFORMED RESTORATION DECISIONS

Page 6: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

WHAT ARE CURRENT AND FUTURE

TRENDS IN VEGETATION CONDITIONS?

Page 7: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

NORTHWEST LANDSCAPES

Page 8: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

SOUTHWEST LANDSCAPES

Photo of Arizona’s Chihuahuan Desert landscape by Miles Hemstrom, USFS-PNW

Page 9: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

WILL MANAGEMENT MAKE A DIFFERENCE

ON THE LANDSCAPE?

Page 10: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

ARE WILDLIFE HABITATS IMPROVED?

Photo of Northern Spotted Owls in Oregon’s Cascade region by James Johnston, INR

Page 11: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

IS WILDFIRE RISK REDUCED?

Photo of Ponderosa Pine forest with high wildfire risk by Miles Hemstrom, PNW Research Station

Page 12: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

ARE REVENUES GENERATED?

Photo of Lumber Mill in Seneca, Oregon by James Johnston, INR

Page 13: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

ARE RURAL COMMUNITIES ENHANCED?

Photo of Simpson Lumber mill in Shelton, Washington

Wikipedia Commons - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Simpson_lumber-Shelton_Washington.jpg

Page 14: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

CAN WE HELP MAKE MORE INFORMED

RESTORATION DECISIONS?

Page 15: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

TEAM DYNAMICS

Science Delivery Knowledge Discovery Decision Support

Page 16: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

SCIENCE DELIVERY

Existing

vegetation data

Potential

vegetation

Ownership

Allocations

Starting

vegetation

conditions State and Transition Models

Watershed

boundaries

HUC 5

Future

vegetation

conditions

Page 17: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

WALL – TO – WALL VEGETATION DATA

For SW region

Page 18: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY

Fuels

Wildlife habitat

Fuel treatment economics

Interpretations

Community economics

Incorporate

management

scenarios

State and Transition

Models Wildfire-fuel

hazards

Wildlife

habitats

Community

economics

Economic

potential

Page 19: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

COMMUNITY IMPACT SCORES

for NW watersheds

DRAFT

DISTRESS CAPACITY POLICY

IMPACTS

Draft outputs

Page 20: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

DECISION SUPPORT

Wildfire-fuel

hazards

Community

Economics

Wildlife

habitat

Fuel

Treatment

Economics

Decision

Support

User

Inputs

Page 21: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

Improved Wildlife Habitats

Positive Community Economics

Positive Treatment Revenues

Decreased Fuel Reductions

Increased Water Supply

WATERSHED PRIORITIES

Page 22: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

• Informing Forest Planning

• Supporting 2015 Statewide

Assessments

• Assisting Collaborative Forest

Landscape Restoration Groups

• Informing Landscape

Conservation Collaboratives

• Supporting Recovery Planning

• Evaluating Proposed Policies

IMPACTS

Page 23: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

10/18/10

PROJECT PRODUCTS & ACCESS

www.oregonexplorer.info

Page 24: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

Vision for the Future of ILAP

Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer image of the West by NASA/GSFC/LaRC/JPL, MISR Team

http://eosweb.larc.nasa.gov/HPDOCS/misr/misr_html/usa_canada_west.html

Page 25: Integrated Landscape Assessment Project

Janine Salwasser, project coordinator

[email protected]

541.737.9921

Miles Hemstrom, Forest Service project leader

[email protected]

503.808.2006

Lisa Gaines, project Co-Principal Investigator

[email protected]

541-737-1976

For more information about the

Integrated Landscape Assessment

Project,

please contact:

www.oregonstate.edu/inr/ilap