Integrating Collaboration, Adaptive Management, and Scenario-Planning: Experiences at Las Cienegas
This paper, part of Ecology and Society’s adaptive management issue, shares lessons from 15 years at Las Cienegas NCA. It highlights collaborative strategies, measurable goals, and shared learning that guide successful land health and stakeholder-driven conservation.
Subject Tags
- Conservation Planning
- Ecosystem management
- Grassland
Abstract
Part of the Ecology and Society journal’s special issue on adaptive management, this paper summarizes the essential lessons learned from 15 years’ of collaboration and strong commitment from public stakeholders at Las Cienegas National Conservation Area in southeastern Arizona. The paper describes key components of a program that continues to expand and attract expertise and investment by stakeholders, including: (1) agreement on watershed health goals with measurable resource objectives; (2) gathering relevant and reliable scientific information; (3) creating mechanisms to incorporate new information into decision-making; and 4) using shared learning to improve both the process and management actions. Since 1998, this approach has proved successful for resolving challenging issues and has focused public and private investment on improving land health. Other papers in this special issue provide context and additional examples of adaptive management in practice, including an effort at the Agua Fria National Monument that is being modeled after work at Las Cienegas; all papers can be found here .
Citation
Caves, J.K., Bodner, G.S., Simms, K., Fisher, L.A. and Robertson, T., 2013. Integrating collaboration, adaptive management, and scenario-planning: experiences at Las Cienegas National Conservation Area. Ecology and Society, 18(3).
TNC Authors
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Gita Bodner
Conservation Ecologist, Arizona
The Nature Conservancy
Email: gbodner@tnc.org