The following pages link to Jake F. Weltzin (Q50151):
Displayed 34 items.
- U.S. Geological Survey landscape science strategy 2020–2030 (Q56116) (← links)
- USA National Phenology Network observational data documentation (Q57613) (← links)
- USA National Phenology Network gridded products documentation (Q58292) (← links)
- A science products inventory for citizen-science planning and evaluation (Q144963) (← links)
- 2018 USA National Phenology Annual Report (Q149809) (← links)
- The plant phenology monitoring design for the National Ecological Observatory Network (Q156805) (← links)
- The NEON Ecological Forecasting Challenge (Q157777) (← links)
- Incorporating USGS Web Cameras into the Phenocam Network to Enhance Scientific Understanding of Phenological Trends and Variability (Q160344) (← links)
- Collaborating with Resource Managers to Identify and Address Phenological Information Needs (Q160583) (← links)
- Workflows to Support Integrated Predictive Science Capacity: Forecasting Invasive Species for Natural Resource Planning and Risk Assessment (Q229115) (← links)
- Integration of Phenological Forecast Maps for Assessment of Biodiversity: An Enterprise Workflow (Q230027) (← links)
- Citizen science can improve conservation science, natural resource management, and environmental protection (Q239006) (← links)
- USA National Phenology Network’s volunteer-contributed observations yield predictive models of phenological transitions (Q239775) (← links)
- North America (Q245060) (← links)
- National Park Service and the USA National Phenology Network (Q253996) (← links)
- Phenology forecasts predict pest seasonal activity to support decision making (Q254040) (← links)
- Bridging the research-management gap: Landscape ecology in practice on public lands in the western United States (Q254456) (← links)
- Time to branch out? Application of hierarchical survival models in plant phenology (Q254900) (← links)
- Pheno forecasts predict seasonal activity of pest and invasive species to support decision making (Q256568) (← links)
- Ecosystems, Ecosystem Services, and Biodiversity (Q259542) (← links)
- Developing enterprise tools and capacities for large-scale natural resource monitoring: A visioning workshop (Q265501) (← links)
- USA National Phenology Network supports decision making (Q268847) (← links)
- Cross-scale phenological data integration to benefit resource management and monitoring (Q270067) (← links)
- US Fish and Wildlife Service and the USA National Phenology Network (Q274894) (← links)
- PS3: The Pheno-Synthesis software suite for integration and analysis of multi-scale, multi-platform phenological data (Q277091) (← links)
- Phenology as a tool to link ecology and sustainable decision making in a dynamic environment (Q280664) (← links)
- Investing in citizen science can improve natural resource management and environmental protection (Q289166) (← links)
- Short-term forecasts of insect phenology inform pest management (Q290036) (← links)
- Differential changes in the onset of spring across US National Wildlife Refuges and North American migratory bird flyways (Q290243) (← links)
- Trends and natural variability of North American spring onset as evaluated by a new gridded dataset of spring indices (Q291921) (← links)
- Seasonality of biological and physical systems as indicators of climatic variation and change (Q299517) (← links)
- Defining opportunities for collaboration across data life cycles (Q300893) (← links)
- Climate change effects on biodiversity, ecosystems, ecosystem services, and natural resource management in the United States (Q310297) (← links)
- Spring leaf and bloom index dates (1880-2013) and migratory bird flyways (Q327733) (← links)