Skip to main content

Tag: Regional Oak Plan

Population and habitat objectives for landbirds in prairie, oak, and riparian habitats of western Oregon and Washington

This document has been prepared to stimulate and support an active approach to the conservation of landbirds in prairie, oak, and riparian habitats of Western Oregon and Washington. It represents the collective efforts of individuals from multiple agencies and organizations within the Oregon-Washington Chapter of Partners in Flight. Participants included biologists and ecologists from Federal and State agencies, industry, private consulting firms, environmental organizations, and academia in order to ensure a full range of ideas, information flow, and practicalities.

It is intended to complement the goals, objectives, and strategies in several other planning and conservation processes and initiatives by filling a niche that is usually absent in those efforts: quantitative, prescriptive recommendations for habitat conditions most suitable for individual and suites of landbird species at several geographic scales (e.g., regional, subregional, site). The use and implementation of these recommendations can be done independently for landbird-specific conservation, or complementarily within the context of broader conservation goals to support and strengthen other plans. You can find these resources inside the document below and listed and linked here.

To see how a PIF plan was implemented in a project check out Case Study: Adaptive Management.

For more information and guidance on how to use a Partners in Flight plan explore Using a Partners in Flight Plan

Imperiled and Focal Species

A strategy for achieving functioning ecosystems for landbirds is described through the habitat requirements for 26 focal species and seven imperiled species. By managing for a suite of focal species representative of important habitat components, many other species and processes that maintain biodiversity will also be conserved. The following landbird focal species were selected based on their degree of breeding season association with important habitat attributes in prairie, oak, and riparian ecosystems of western Oregon and Washington.

Imperiled and Focal Species by Region with Population Trends – Species listed under BCR 5 are hyperlinked. The link takes you directly to that individual species page to learn more about their population and habitat objectives based on region (Puget Lowlands, Willamette Valley, and Klamath Mountains). You can view all PIF focal species here. 

 Click here to view the Partners in Flight Conservation Plan for landbirds in prairie, oak, and riparian habitats of western Oregon and Washington.

AvianKnowledgeNorthwest.net/PIF-ORWA-western-lowlands

Prairie, Oaks, and People—A Conservation Business Plan to Revitalize the Prairie-Oak Habitats of the Pacific Northwest

Prairie Oaks and People business plan cover v100517 (72ppi 4x3)Prairie, Oaks, and People—A Conservation Business Plan to Revitalize the Prairie-Oak Habitats of the Pacific Northwest outlines the case for long-term investments that will restore a signature feature of the region’s historic landscape. A broad coalition of partners created the new conservation strategy to help conserve oak woodlands and native prairies from northern California to British Columbia. The plan is the product of more than a year’s work by partners of Klamath Bird Observatory, Cascadia Prairie-Oak Partnership, American Bird Conservancy, Center for Natural Lands Management, Willamette Partnership, and Pacific Birds Habitat Joint Venture.

Continue reading