The Blueprint 1.0 Data Download contains an ArcMap map package (.mpk) containing the spatial data associated with the Blueprint 1.0.
Blueprint 1.0 Description
Welcome to the Conservation Blueprint 1.0 Map on the Conservation Planning Atlas! The Blueprint is a living spatial plan for responding to future changes like urban growth, sea level rise, and climate change. More than 300 people from 85 organizations were actively involved in developing this version of the Blueprint. This mapping interface, hosted on the Conservation Planning Atlas, is designed to help inform conservation decisions by allowing you to explore the Blueprint and add data layers. Youâll find information on priority areas, recommended actions, and other spatial data relevant to conservation planning.
Learn more about the Blueprint
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Background
The lands and waters of the South Atlantic are changing rapidly. Climate change, urban growth, and increasing human demands on resources are reshaping the landscape. While these forces cut across political and jurisdictional boundaries, the conservation community does not have a consistent cross-boundary, cross-organization plan for how to respond. The South Atlantic Conservation Blueprint will be that plan.
Potential uses
Uses under discussion include: Finding places to pool resources, raising new conservation dollars, guiding infrastructure development, developing conservation incentives, showing how local actions fit into a larger strategy, and locating places to build resilience to major disasters
Development
In March 2012, developing a Conservation Blueprint became the 3 - 5 year mission of the South Atlantic LCC. In March 2013, the cooperative adopted Natural Resource Indicators (and shortly after Cultural Resource Indicators) as shared measures of success. The cooperative also created a Conservation Design Team (Design experts who typically lead large landscape design efforts) and a User Team (Potential âearly adoptersâ of the Blueprint who either directly make conservation decisions or are one step removed) to guide the Blueprint development process
Inland to nearshore waters
During Fall 2013, the cooperative held workshops that brought together ~ 200 people from 58 different organizations to identify subwatersheds (HUC12) and actions in those subwatersheds that should be part of the Blueprint. Workshop participants used both their expert knowledge and geospatial layers depicting future change (e.g., urban growth, sea level rise) and a subset of South Atlantic LCC Natural and Cultural Resource Indicators (e.g., connectivity, historic places) to help with their selections. The workshop results were then combined with existing regional and state plans (TNC Ecoregional Portfolio, ACJV Priority Areas, EPA priority watersheds, NBCI Biologist Ranking Index, PARCAs, VA Natural Landscape Assessment, NC BWHA, GA Priority Waters, AL SHUs, and FL CLIP). Additional plans (e.g., Significant Longleaf Landscapes, SARP Priority Areas) were also checked to ensure coverage.
Nearshore waters to open ocean
During Spring 2014, following up on the regional workshops, the cooperative held virtual workshops to extend the Blueprint coverage 200 miles into the Atlantic ocean to cover the Marine extent of the LCC. Workshop participants started from Outer Continental Shelf Lease Blocks that were Essential Fish Habitat - Habitats of Particular Concern and used both their expert knowledge and supporting geospatial layers to add and modify blocks and actions within blocks that should be part of the Blueprint.
Interpreting final scores
Inland to nearshore waters
Highest priority
Given that these subwatersheds received the highest scores from both the workshop integration and the integration of existing conservation plans these areas are likely to remain important places for shared conservation action into the future.
High priority
While thereâs strong evidence for these subwatersheds being important for shared conservation action, their priority level may change in future versions of the Conservation Blueprint
Further investigation
Since these subwatersheds have strong disagreement between the workshop integration and the integration of existing conservation plans, thereâs uncertainty about whether they should be a high or low priority.
Low priority
While these subwatersheds may have important conservation value, they are a lower priority compared to the âNo regretsâ and âHigh priorityâ categories.
Nearshore waters to open ocean
Highest priority
High priority Outer Continental Shelf Lease Blocks from virtual workshops.
Further investigation
Outer Continental Shelf Lease Blocks where workshop participants disagreed about whether or not they should be included in the Blueprint. These areas require further investigation to determine their relative priority.
More information
http://www.southatlanticlcc.org/blueprint/