Oral Presentation by Session
Burn severity mapping: research and applications
Conservation planning:analysis
Conservation planning:restoration
Cultural landscapes I
Cultural landscapes II
Disturbance effects
Fire & landscape pattern
Landscape change: modeling & analysis
Managed landscapes
NASA-MSU Golley-Odum Symposium: Defining and modeling species-habitat associations: challenges across landscapes (and seascapes)
NASA-MSU Golley-Odum Symposium: Drivers and implications of land use and landcover change
NASA-MSU Golley-Odum Symposium: Integrating remote sensing of forest disturbances with models at broad scales
Patches, corridors, and connectivity
Phenologies as integrative phenomena for landscape research
Poster Session I
Poster Session II
Putting theory into practice: application of landscape ecology principles into environmental decision-making
Recent advances and future innovations in multiscale systematic tree-ring reconstruction of historical fire regimes
Remote sensing I
Remote sensing II
Simulation models: disturbance
Simulation models: plants, animals, ecosystems
Spatial analysis: applications
Spatial analysis: theory & methods
Species distributions: communities
Species distributions: invasives
Species distributions: methods
Species distributions: populations
Species in urban landscapes
Theory & quantitative methods
Toward a Collective Disciplinary Agenda for Landscape Ecology: Goals and Strategies
Patches, corridors, and connectivity
Moderator(s):
Bill Hargrove, Forrest Hoffman
Day:
Thursday
10:00-10:20
James Westervelt
Population viability analysis based on studies of individual behavior
10:20-10:40
Abel Wolman
Marketing to wildlife: conjoint measurement in conservation design
10:40-11:00
William Fields
Hydrological sinks in wetland systems: Is amphibian habitat going down the drain?
11:00-11:20
Brad McRae
Predicting connectivity using circuit analysis: theory, algorithms, and applications in population genetics and conservation planning
11:20-11:40
Tim Keitt
Habitat fragmentation, extinction thresholds and pollinator services in agroecosystems
11:40-12:00
John DiBari
Corridor optimization in fragmented landscapes, or the shortest distance between two points is a crooked line
1:00-1:20
Peter Vogt
Assessing structural and functional connectivity with mathematical morphology
1:20-1:40
Ellen Damschen
Corridors increase species richness at large scales
1:40-2:00
John Orrock
Connectivity, patch shape, and apparent competition among plants
2:00-2:20
Matthew Aldridge
Cluster identification using a parallel Hoshen-Kopelman adaptation with finite state machines
2:20-2:40
David Theobald
Comparing measures of connectivity on landscape networks using the FunConn tools -- as part of Patches, Corridors, and Connectivity
2:40-3:00
Jochen A.G. Jaeger
Measuring landscape connectivity by incorporating variable barrier strengths of transportation infrastructure into the effective mesh size
3:20-3:40
Daniel Smith
Roads as barriers and conduits for connectivity: using multiple taxonomic groups to assess road effects across multiple spatial scales
3:40-4:00
Daniel Kuefler
Using movement behaviors to predict connectivity for rare animals
4:00-4:20
Thomas Hoctor
Assessing landscape and focal species connectivity in Florida
4:20-4:40
William Hargrove
Predicting potential dispersal pathways from Yellowstone to the Yukon and within the Southeastern Ecological Framework using the PATH Model
4:40-5:00
Forrest Hoffman
Using the PATH model to predict corridors for Red-Cockaded Woodpecker and Gopher Tortoise near military installations
5:00-5:20
Discussion
Back to the
main session page
.
Home
Conference Program
Schedule
Presentation Program
Plenary Symposium
Keynote Speakers
Announcement
Printed Abstracts
Field Trips
Organized
Self Guided
Workshops
Awards
Student Award Program
NASA-MSU Program
Travel Information
Hotel Information
Meals and Events
Tucson Area
Conference Registration
Exhibitor Information
About This Site