

We recommend that government agencies develop and adopt best practices for managed relocation. Schwartz, 59, was found dead in a northern Arizona canyon on May 8 after being reported missing the week before. Our interdisciplinary team considered ethics, law, policy, ecology, and natural resources management in order to identify the key issues of managed relocation relevant for developing sound policies that support decisions for resource management. Friends and colleagues of deceased ASU English instructor Debra Schwartz are carrying on her memory by bringing the same commitment to the community she exemplified through her life. Furthermore, ongoing managed relocation actions lack scientific and societal engagement. The published literature has emphasized biological concerns over difficult ethical, legal, and policy issues. DEBRA SCHWARTZ A LIARS WORKSHOP: HUMOR WRITING TECHNIQUES The ASU. The managed relocation of species is a controversial management response to climate change. Phoenix New Times editor Amy Silverman and ASU Arts Writer Deborah Sussman. Projections indicating that climate change may drive substantial losses of biodiversity have compelled some scientists to suggest that traditional management strategies are insufficient. It has been claimed that a major extinction event is under way and that climate change is increasing its severity. Managed relocation is defined as the movement of species, populations, or genotypes to places outside the areas of their historical distributions to maintain biological diversity or ecosystem functioning with changing climate. Arizona State University, MS: 239-12 NASA Ames Research Center, 94035, Moffett Field, CA, USA. Sandra Zellmer, University of Nebraska Lincoln Follow Mark Vellend, Université de Sherbrooke, Quebec Williams, University of Wisconsin–Madison. Thompson, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, La Jolla, CA Debra Schwartz, 59, was found dead in an unnamedslot canyon below the rim of Oak Creek Canyon, theSheriffs Office. Richardson, Stellenbosch University, South Africa ASU professor found dead in Oak Creek Canyon. Stephen Polasky, University of Minnesota - Twin Citiesĭavid M. Lee Hannah, Conservation International’s Center for Applied Biodiversity Scienceĭebra Javeline, University of Notre Dame, Nancy Green, US Fish and Wildlife Service Patrick Gonzalez, US National Park Service Etterson, University of Minnesota, Duluthĭwight Fielder, US Bureau of Land Management Regan Early, University of Évora, Portugal Holly Doremus, University of California, Berkeley Gerardo Ceballos, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico Camacho, University of California, Irvine Follow

Jean Brennan, Virginia Polytechnical Institute and State UniversityĪlejandro E. Borevitz, Australian National University, Canberra. Schwartz, University of California, Davis Follow
