Welcome to the Southwest!

Southwest region depicted in a relief map.
Southwest Region. Map courtesy of the Southwest Regional Gap Analysis Project.

 

The Southwest Information Node (SWIN) includes Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah. The southwest is home to an incredibly diverse natural and political environment and the rapidly growing population interacts with complex natural features such as deserts, plateaus, rivers, and mountain ranges.

Working together, SWIN and its partners promote dissemination of the best scientific information for the Southwest. SWIN is a collaboration among two USGS Centers - Fort Collins Science Center and the Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center, the University of New Mexico, the Merriam-Powell Center for Environmental Research at Northern Arizona University, and the Laboratory for Environmental Spatial Analysis at New Mexico State University.

 

Conferences of Interest


 
  RESTORING THE WEST CONFERENCE 2009. Peaks to Valleys: Innovative Land Management for the Great Basin
10/27/2008 - 10/28/2008
Logan, Utah
United States

  Ecological Society of America 94th Annual Meeting
8/2/2009 - 8/7/2009
Albuquerque, New Mexico
United States

  2009 Annual Meeting of Southwest Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation
9/10/2009 - 9/13/2009
St. George, Utah
United States

  Third Annual Phenology Research and Observations of Southwest Ecosystems (PROSE) Symposium
10/2/2009 - 10/2/2009
Tucson, Arizona
United States

  10th Biennial Conference for Research on the Colorado Plateau
10/5/2009 - 10/8/2009
Flagstaff, Arizona
United States

  Restoring the West Conference 2009
10/27/2009 - 10/28/2009
Logan, Utah
United States

  Natural Resource Needs Related to Climate Change in the Great Basin and Mojave Desert: Research, Adaptation, Mitigation (week of January 11th, exact dates pending)
1/11/2010 - 1/15/2010
Las Vegas, Nevada
United States

  Seventh National Monitoring Conference
4/25/2010 - 4/29/2010
Denver, Colorado
United States


Project Highlight

Sage grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus)
Sage grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus)
Credit: Karen Steenhof, USGS

NBII-Great Basin Information Project Photo Catalogue

The Great Basin Information Project provides consolidated and efficient access to information about the Great Basin and the Columbia Plateau Regions of eastern Washington and Oregon, southern Idaho, northern Nevada and Utah, and portions of northeastern California.  Three major plant communities grow in the Great Basin and Columbia Plateau: sagebrush, salt desert shrub, and pinyon-juniper woodlands.  The Great Basin and Columbia Plateau regions comprise a large area of the western United States, approximately 225,674 sq. miles in size.

The NBII Program is administered by the Biological Informatics Office of the U.S. Geological Survey
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