Forest Conservation in the Anthropocene, available now:
http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/pubs/rmrs_p071.html

Abstract: Climate change is but one aspect of the Anthropocene, a new epoch
in which the effects of human activities have become the predominant force
in the global biosphere. More than just an overlay on the traditional
concerns of sustainable natural resource management, the uncertainties
associated with these effects are creating a “no-analog future” in which
much of the existing science relating to the functioning and response of
forest ecosystems - which serves as the fundamental basis for current
forest management practices and policies - must be reconsidered. In these
collected papers, leading scientists, resource managers and policy
specialists explore the implications of climate change and other
manifestations of the Anthropocene on the management of wildlife habitat,
biodiversity, water, and other resources, with particular attention to the
effects of wildfire. Recommendations include the need for a supporting
institutional, legal, and policy framework that is not just different but
more dynamic, to facilitate resource management adaptation and preparedness
in a period of accelerating environmental change.


-- 
R. Patrick Bixler, PhD

Collaborative Stewardship Solutions, Founding Consultant
Pinchot Institute for Conservation, Research Fellow
Colorado State University, Adjunct Professor

"In wildness is the preservation of the World." Henry David Thoreau

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