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Resources

Resources

A repository of data, publications, tools, and other products from project teams, Science Collaborative program, and partners.

Displaying 41 - 50 of 53
K-12 |

This art collection is the result of work by 3rd-6th graders and stemmed from a climate resilience workshop hosted by the Tijuana River and Kachemak Bay Reserves as part of a 2015 Science Transfer project

Tool |

This online toolbox contains adaptation planning tools developed during a 2015 Science Transfer project on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska.

Tool |

This document, developed by the Tijuana River and Kachemak Bay Reserves staff, contains instructions for developing scenario narratives and a scenario narrative template.

Case Study |

This case study includes four scenario narratives outlining a different plausible future state of a system developed by local leaders, researchers, and stakeholders on the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska.

Report |

This document summarizes the "Successful Adaptation Part II: Strategies, Pathways, and Evaluation" workshop hosted by the Kachemak Bay Reserve from April 20-21, 2017 in Homer, Alaska.

Report |

This document summarizes the "Scenario Planning and Pathways to Successful Adaptation" workshop hosted by the Kachemak Bay Reserve from October 4-5, 2016 in Homer, Alaska.

Report |

This document synthesizes the best available science around climate change impacts projected for the Kenai Peninsula and is the result of a collaboration between Kachemak Bay Reserve staff and researchers.

Report |

This document summarizes stakeholder information collected by the Kachemak Bay Reserve to gain insight into community priorities related to climate adaptation.

Journal Article |

This 2017 article appeared in the journal Ecology, and presents findings from a study assessing the individual and synergistic effects of air temperature and salinity on Olympia oyster mortality across temporal patterns that accurately reflect the natural environment.

Journal Article |

This 2016 journal article was published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B. The study highlights how extreme precipitation events in 2011 may have contributed to near 100% mass mortality of wild oysters in northern San Francisco Bay.