Pacific Southwest Region
California, Nevada and Klamath Basin

Science Applications

The goal of the Service's Science Applications initiative is to strengthen the Service's tradition of scientific excellence in the conservation of fish, wildlife, plants and their habitat. We will accomplish this by:

• Expanding our capacities to acquire apply and communicate scientific information.
• Promoting active involvement of the Service and our employees in the larger scientific community.
• Strengthening partnerships between the Service and other scientific organizations; and
• Growing the next generation of Service scientists.

This site will maintain information on implementation of the Science Applications initiative and related matters.

program activities:

Strategic Habitat Conservation

Strategic Habitat Conservation is an adaptive resource management framework that applies lessons learned from past management actions when doing conservation planning for the future. It has five key elements: biological planning, conservation design, conservation delivery, monitoring and research.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Strategic Habitat Conservation Homepage


Landscape Conservation Cooperatives

Landscape Conservation Cooperatives (LCCs) are self-directed science and conservation planning partnerships that provide shared science capacity to inform resource management actions addressing climate change and other processes operating on broad landscape scales.

 



Climate Change

Changing climate is accelerating threats to our wildlife and natural systems like habitat loss and water scarcity, making it all the more important that we work together to conserve America's natural heritage for the future.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Climate Change Homepage
Pacific Southwest Region Climate Change Homepage

 


Science Policy

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is committed to using sound science in its decision-making and to provide the American people with information of the highest possible quality. Visit our peer-review page for more on what we're doing to ensure the quality and credibility of the scientific information we distribute.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Science Information Quality Homepage

Scientific Code of Professional Conduct for the Service - 212 FW 7

Peer Review

Peer Review of Region 8 Scientific Information

Science Support

The Science Applications Program plays a key role in providing science support to other Service programs in the Pacific Southwest Region. The program coordinates closely with the U.S. Geological Survey, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and other organizations to acquire, synthesize and share science information that land resource managers need to be effective.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife/USGS Science Support Partnership Home

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Scientific Journals