Fish & Wildlife Service Issues Plan for Species Conservation in Climate Change Era. By Andrew Freedman, ClimateCentral, 9/28/10. "Calling global climate change 'the transformational conservation challenge of our time,' the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS) issued a new climate change strategic plan on Monday, which represents a significant shift in the agency's approach to protecting species. The plan puts a heavy emphasis on the need for the federal government to work closely with state and local agencies, academia, and private groups as climate change alters the suitable habitat for many species across the country. As the plan notes, climate change is already shifting habitat and threatening species large and small, from polar bears to alpine plants.
"'In the history of wildlife conservation, the Service and the larger conservation community have never experienced a challenge that is so ubiquitous across the landscape. Our existing conservation infrastructure will be pressed to its limits -- quite likely beyond its limits -- to respond successfully,' the plan states. The agency, which is part of the Interior Department, announced several concrete measures to respond to climate change, including placing a high priority on helping species adapt to changing temperatures and precipitation patterns, and to sea level rise. The FWS plans to establish a network of regional hubs for scientific research and information sharing, to be known as Landscape Conservation Cooperatives, which will serve as a scientific research and information sharing arm of FWS and its partners. The scientific data produced from these cooperatives would be incorporated into FWS' plans to help species adapt to the effects of climate change."
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