For the “Roll-out” of the Final Research Results by UMD/IAN on the “Tennessee River Basin Report Card within the Appalachian Land Conservation Region.” This “Report Card” approach is a valuable component of the larger, and long-term planning effort for large-scale collaborative conservation in the 21st Century. It represents the commitment of the Appalachian landscape conservation community (AppLCC) previously to fund this a science-based analysis of the current state – and the community identified the Tennessee River Basin area to be the demonstration or Focal Area to deploy this critical science-based information approach.
Many of you participated in the series of expert consultations over many months and others critiques an earlier draft shared at the TRB Network meeting in Aug. Your input provided the foundation of this report -- identifying metrics and evaluating "action-based" indicators to help inform conservation planning. Thus we’d welcome your participation as the UMD team share the final “Roll-out” of this important research. Full copies of both the 8-page visual "Report Card" and the more technical methods paper will both be available as PDFs that will then be posted to our website applcc.org for download. Check the home page for the link.
Investigators: The Integration and Application Network (IAN) and the Appalachian Laboratory(AL), two units of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (UMCES), worked with the Appalachian Land Conservation Cooperative (AppLCC) to advance a report card for the AppLCC geography (now under the newly forming Appalachian "Landscape Partnership").
The Principal Investigators: Heath Kelsey and Andrew Elmore worked directly with project partners to achieve tasks outlined in the above proposal, including meeting facilitation, stakeholder engagement, assessment of data, and creation of visual elements and the guidance document. Dr. Elmore performed GIS analyses and data analysis and interpretation. Dylan Taillie assisted in the coordination of project meetings, and contributed components of data compilations and analysis under the direction of Dr. Kelsey. Mr. Taillie was primarily responsible for creation of the visual elements and production of the report card document.
Scope of Work: the creation of the Report Card involved extensive consultation via web meeting with both Appalachian Partnership and members of the Tennessee River Basin Network at their annual meeting in Aug 2016. Based on the input provided by these stakeholders, metrics were identified to help inform and ‘grade’ the current status of those environmental or socially-important features or benefits.
Upon the completion of this project two products were released: a detailed, technical paper on the methodology, and a user-friendly visualization – the “Report Card” – to assist managers and stewards examine the status of the Basins important resources, to consider these factors in identifying follow-up actions and priorities, and to serve as an elegant outreach tool to further engage local communities and decision-makers in considering how best to invest in the Basin to safeguard all the important things that people care about and rely upon that influence their quality of life and cultural appreciate this unique part of our national and natural heritage.
The following video webinar was created to assist in understanding the Report Card
]]>TN River Biodiversity Meeting August 2017: Welcome- Evan Crews from Appalachian LCC on Vimeo.
]]>Each year TRB Network members gather to celebrate successes, share current conservation efforts, and discuss how the Network should collectively move forward to maximize efficacy of conserving and improving aquatic biodiversity in the Tennessee River Basin.
At the meeting, TVA gave awards to partner groups in two categories: Education/Outreach and Science/Management. A $5,000 cash prize is being donated to each winner’s Environmental Conservation organization of choice.
“These award winners, like those in the past, are well deserving of this recognition,” says Evan Crews, senior manager of Natural Resources Management for TVA. “Their accomplishments represent the dedicated people and organizations that care for—and have had an enormous positive impact on—water resources and the aquatic biodiversity throughout the Tennessee River Basin.”
The Tennessee River Basin Network is a joint effort organized by TVA, with strong support by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Tennessee Aquarium. Partnership groups include federal agencies and tribal nations, state Agencies and regional partnerships, and non-governmental organizations and local community groups.
From 2014 to 2016, TVA provided $2.6 million and remaining network partners provided an additional $2.5 million to implement protection/improvement measures including purchasing conservation easements, establishing riparian stream buffers, removing aquatic stream barriers, creating in-stream habitat and implementing stream-bank restoration projects.
“We have come so far in these three years with so many great initiatives as a result of this partnership, and more are being planned for the future,” O’Quinn says. “There has been some amazing work by these organizations and individuals to protect, conserve and enhance our unique landscape within the Tennessee River Basin.”
For More Information Visit TVA
https://www.tva.com/Newsroom/Biodiversity-Heroes

Education/Outreach winner Robin Goad and Evan Crews.

Science Management winner Callie Moore and Evan Crews.
TN River Biodiversity Meeting August 2017: Dr. Daniel Hanks from Appalachian LCC on Vimeo.
]]>TN River Biodiversity Meeting August 2017: Welcome- Kendra Rickley from Appalachian LCC on Vimeo.
]]>TN River Biodiversity Meeting August 2017: Gillian Bee Video from Appalachian LCC on Vimeo.
]]>TN River Biodiversity Meeting August 2017: Report Card- Heath Kelsey & Andrew Almarr from Appalachian LCC on Vimeo.
]]>TN River Biodiversity Meeting August 2017: Keynote- Micheal Slattery from Appalachian LCC on Vimeo.
]]>TN River Biodiversity Meeting August 2017: Welcome- Bucky Edminson from Appalachian LCC on Vimeo.
]]>TN River Biodiversity Meeting August 2017: Welcome- Anna George from Appalachian LCC on Vimeo.
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