• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
Southern Rockies Fire Science Network

Southern Rockies Fire Science Network

JFSP Fire Science Exchange Network

  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Our Partners
  • Subregions
    • Why Subregions?
    • Black Hills
    • Wyoming Sagebrush
    • Uinta Basin
    • Wasatch Plateaus/Mountains
    • Rocky Mountains
    • Canyonlands/Desert Montane
  • Events
    • Event Summaries
  • Resources
    • Pre and Post-Fire Emergency Resources
    • Research & Publications
    • Maps, Models & Apps
    • COVID-19
  • Contact
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Coming to a landscape near you: Natural resource changes in the Interior West

From the Rocky Mountain Research Station:

In the coming decades, population growth, economic growth, and associated land-use changes – in concert with climate change – will influence forests and rangelands in the Interior West. Society’s demand for ecosystem goods and services continues to increase as human and biophysical change alter the productive capacity of these lands.

Read the brief here.

Read the updated 2016 report here.

Posted by:
Gloria Edwards
Published on:
April 9, 2020

Categories: Publication, Research Brief/SynthesisTags: all regions, climate change, climate change adaptation, climate change vulnerability, ecosystem services, human dimensions of natural resources, landscape restoration and resilience, natural resource management, population dynamics, private lands, public lands, Rocky Mountain Research Station, USFS

Footer

Connect With Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Sign up for our newsletter

Got a Question?
Email us.

This regional Fire Exchange is one of 15 regional fire science exchanges sponsored by the Joint Fire Science Program (JFSP).
View resources from multiple exchanges.