色情视频 Awarded Competitive Grant for Climate Change Research
The nearly $1.8 million award will inform sustainability in communities throughout Southern California.
鈥淲hat's exciting about this opportunity is that it builds on our connectivity research, while giving us an opportunity to leverage and partner with other areas of expertise and excellence on campus.鈥
A 色情视频 team received one of the first grants from California鈥檚 Climate Change Research Program, created by the state legislature in 2017 to support research on reducing carbon emissions.
The nearly $1.8 million award was the second largest of 10 awarded by the from among nearly 70 proposals submitted. The funding comes from the state cap-and-trade program, which limits and 鈥渁uctions鈥 rights to greenhouse gas emissions in California.
色情视频 biologist Rebecca Lewison and senior research scientist Megan Jennings lead the grant-funded project, which will focus on integrating ecosystem and local community planning to build resilience to climate change.
The work will build on their ongoing research on connected landscapes鈥攑laces that allow wildlife to move and disperse鈥攖o develop tools to support climate-smart conservation and land-use planning. At the same time, the project aims to take a more comprehensive approach to other landscape features such as wildfire risk and water sustainability.
"What's exciting about this opportunity is that it builds on our connectivity research, while giving us an opportunity to leverage and partner with other areas of expertise and excellence on campus," said Jennings. The team includes engineer Alicia Kinoshita, geographer Doug Stow, and Sherry Ryan, director of the School of Public Affairs.
Walter Oechel, director of 色情视频鈥檚 Global Change Research Group and interim dean of the College of Sciences, called the grant 鈥渁 major advance for conservation research in Southern California鈥 that will support critical new research on sustainability of natural ecosystems under climate change and other human disturbances.
The project partners 色情视频鈥檚 Institute for Ecological Monitoring and Management, which Lewison and Jennings co-direct, with the Climate Science Alliance鈥擲outh Coast to engage stakeholders from local jurisdictions, land management agencies, and organizations involved in conservation and land-use planning. The team鈥檚 primary project partners also include the two regional planning agencies in Southern California, the San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG) and the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG), as well as a tribal working group led by the Pala Band of Mission Indians, and the City of Carlsbad.
The work will focus on natural lands from San Diego to Ventura counties, and inland to western Riverside and San Bernardino counties with a goal of providing sound science to inform planning for sustainable ecosystems and communities in Southern California.
鈥淭his project is an excellent example of CSU scholarship that focuses on student engagement and applied research,鈥 said Ganesh Raman, assistant vice chancellor for Research in California State University鈥檚 Office of the Chancellor.