{"status": "Complete", "organizations": [{"category": "Academic", "logo_name": "09_20_38_65_EPSCoR_300x300.png", "name": "EPSCoR - Alaska Adapting to Changing Environments", "description": "Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research - A nationwide research funding program administered by the National Science Foundation.    http://www.alaska.edu/epscor/"}, {"category": "Federal", "logo_name": "6jc8g1ukz3_NSF.png", "name": "National Science Foundation", "description": "The National Science Foundation (NSF) is an independent federal agency created by Congress in 1950 \"to promote the progress of science; to advance the national health, prosperity, and welfare; to secure the national defense\u2026\""}], "links": [{"url": "http://bioscience.oxfordjournals.org/content/66/6/458", "category": "Website", "display_text": "Publisher's Website"}], "collections": [], "description": "Landscape ecology is a discipline that explicitly considers the influence of time and space on the environmental patterns we observe and the processes that create them. Although many of the topics studied in landscape ecology have public policy implications, three are of particular concern: climate change; land use\u2013land cover change (LULCC); and a particular type of LULCC, urbanization. These processes are interrelated, because LULCC is driven by both human activities (e.g., agricultural expansion and urban sprawl) and climate change (e.g., desertification). Climate change, in turn, will affect the way humans use landscapes. Interactions among these drivers of ecosystem change can have destabilizing and accelerating feedback, with consequences for human societies from local to global scales. These challenges require landscape ecologists to engage policymakers and practitioners in seeking long-term solutions, informed by an understanding of opportunities to mitigate the impacts of anthropogenic drivers on ecosystems and adapt to new ecological realities.", "end_date": null, "title": "How Landscape Ecology Informs Global Land-Change Science and Policy", "other_contacts": [], "iso_topics": ["007"], "tags": ["Urbanization", "Land use", "policy", "climate change", "Landscape Ecology"], "bounds": [{"geom": "{\"type\":\"Point\",\"coordinates\":[-147.72366452958923,64.84456517851851]}", "type": "Attachment"}], "start_date": null, "regions": ["Alaska"], "other_agencies": "National Science Foundation", "data_types": [{"name": "Report", "description": null}], "archived_at": null, "primary_contacts": [{"phone": null, "name": "Tania  Clucas", "email": "thclucas@alaska.edu"}], "type": {"color": "#c09853", "name": "Project", "description": "catalog record for projects with no associated data/observation files"}, "slug": "how-landscape-ecology-informs-global-land-change-science-and-policy", "attachments": [{"category": "Geojson", "file_name": "imported_locations", "description": "gLynx locations", "file_size": 158}]}