This study examined landowner perspectives on big game conservation in Wyoming, with a focus on understanding how private landowners can be engaged in large-landscape conservation. Through a comprehensive survey of over 4,500 landowners, the research investigated awareness, participation, preferences, and attitudes toward conservation programs aimed at conserving big game. View >
AUTHORS: Hilary Byerly Flint and Drew Bennett
DATE: November 2024
KEYWORDS: private lands, big game, wildlife, conservation, survey, conservation easements
This study broadly examines current social dynamics underlying grassland conservation efforts in North America’s Central Grasslands. This research highlights how social science can address complexities of grassland management by contributing to frameworks and metrics for quantifying the value and conservation benefits derived from social relationships and relationship-building. View >
AUTHORS: Callie Berman, Drew Bennett, and Jeremy Pittman
DATE: November 2024
KEYWORDS: North American Central Grasslands, grasslands conservation, stakeholder perspectives, relationship-building, tribal relations, siloed organizations and agencies
Conservation easements are one of the best tools for permanently protecting private lands. This report demonstrates the stages and timelines that conservation easement projects go through in Wyoming as landowners and land trusts work together to conserve important landscapes. Further, it shows that the demand for these projects has grown in recent years and remains generally high among landowners. View >
AUTHORS: Lucas Thorsness and Drew Bennett
DATE: September 2024
KEYWORDS: Land conservation, land trusts, easements, land use, private lands
This is a geospatial dataset displaying fully adjudicated surface water irrigation rights in the Green River Basin of Sublette County, Wyoming. It displays point of use polygons across the county which contain attribute information on water right characteristics such as water right number, priority date, permitted flow amount, and more. View >
AUTHORS: Lucas Thorsness and Drew Bennett
DATE: September 2024
KEYWORDS: Water irrigation rights, geospatial dataset, water resource management, policies, agricultural water users, land use
We examined the social processes, values, and goals that influence landowner participation in conservation efforts through focus groups in 4 locations across Colorado. The study revealed that landowners view conservation primarily through the lens of stewardship and heritage rather than ecosystem protection, emphasizing how their land management practices aim to balance economic viability with environmental stewardship while preserving land for future generations. View >
AUTHORS: Callie Berman and Drew Bennett
DATE: August 2024
KEYWORDS: Conservation, private lands, working lands, landowner, wildlife, social science
Many U.S. states and local governments have begun to adopt policies with the goal of protecting wildlife corridors and maintaining or enhancing landscape connectivity. However, little analysis has been done to understand the different approaches these polices have taken, the specific sectors they target, perceptions of the successes and challenges in implementing the policies, and their perceived impact on corridor integrity. To fill this research gap, we analyzed 37 state and 10 county or municipal policies and interviewed 20 key individuals to better understand the scope, origin, structure, and impact of those connectivity policies. View >
AUTHORS: Travis Brammer, Sharon Buccino, Temple Stoellinger, Heather Bradford, Joe Budd, Colton Edwards, Jacob Stewart, Zack Wurtzebach, and Drew Bennett
DATE: September 2024
KEYWORDS: Connectivity, wildlife, policies, migration, conservation, transportation, land use
Private landowners play a pivotal role in conserving the West’s iconic landscapes and natural resources. There are a number of tools available to landowners that can support agricultural livelihoods by making land more affordable or compensating landowners for taking care of wildlife habitat. In this publication, we highlight both long-standing tools like the Conservation Reserve Program and conservation easements, and emerging tools like occupancy agreements and disease compensation programs. We hope this tool kit can help landowners consider the relevant options and the potential benefits. View >
AUTHORS: Travis Brammer, Drew Bennett
DATE: December 2023
KEYWORDS: Private lands, conservation, economics, incentives, ranching, land use, land development, wildlife
In April 2023, the Ruckelshaus Institute, the WORTH Initiative, and the Wyoming Office of Outdoor Recreation convened “Outdoor Recreation: Building It the Way We Want It,” a three-day forum and workshop exploring how Wyoming communities can balance the benefits and impacts of growing outdoor recreation and tourism. Organizers distilled panel discussions, workshop notes, audience questions, survey feedback, and debrief conversations into a “proceedings.”
The proceedings contain highlights from the forum, key takeaways, major themes, priorities, commitments from forum particpants, and more. View >
AUTHORS: Birch Malotky
DATE: December 2023
KEYWORDS: Outdoor recreation, balance, development, communities, collaboration, wildlife, trails, business, education, crowding, conservation, economic impact
Researchers in the MacMillan Private Land Stewardship Program and the Western Landowners Alliance surveyed 1,020 agricultural water users throughout six states in the Colorado River Basin to understand their perspectives on the water shortage crisis, their current water conservation practices, and their preferences for strategies to address water shortages going forward. They also conducted qualitative research to capture preferences for local approaches to managing water and provide additional context on dynamics in the Colorado River Basin, including interviews with 12 agricultural producers and water experts and a focus group with 10 agricultural water users in Colorado. View >
AUTHORS: Drew Bennett, Max Lewis, Hallie Mahowald, Matt Collins, Travis Brammer, Hilary Byerly Flint, Lucas Thorsness, Weston Eaton, Kristiana Hansen, Mark Burbach, and Elizabeth Koebele
DATE: September 2023
KEYWORDS: Whitney MacMillan Private Lands Stewardship Program, agriculture, farming, ranching, irrigation, irrigators, Colorado River Basin, water shortages, survey, focus group, policy
This study explores the perspectives, values, needs, and concerns of Wyoming residents
in relation to energy in Wyoming. It is a replication of a 2020 study published as
“Social License for Wyoming’s Energy Future: What Do Residents Want?” Both studies
were motivated by a desire
to understand what Wyoming residents want in relation to energy and why. The research
entailed a survey of Wyoming residents as well as a Q-study, which consisted of interviews
with 22 Wyoming residents who actively work on energy related issues in the state.
View >
AUTHORS: Jessica Western, Selena Gerace, and Will Benkelman
DATE: September 2023
KEYWORDS: Energy, energy development, Wyoming, future, oil, coal, natural gas, renewable energy, solar, wind, nuclear, social license, energy future, Q-study, survey, SER
A trail charrette is a public meeting designed to engage residents in community recreation planning. Charrettes serve as a way of quickly generating a design solution while integrating the aptitudes and interests of a diverse group of people. In this case, Wyoming Pathways and the Ruckelshaus Institute convened and facilitated a trail charrette that asked Pinedale stakeholders for their input on improving and potentially expanding frontcountry, non-motorized recreation opportunities in their community. View >
AUTHORS: Nicole Gautier and Birch Malotky
DATE: September 2023
KEYWORDS: Trails, outdoor recreation, non-motorized, hiking, mountain biking, public engagement, frontcountry, summer, community wellness, local, Wyoming Pathways, Sublette Trails Association, planning
This issue of our annual magazine explores ideas for building prosperity while advancing conservation across the West. Articles cover such topics as restoring a bison economy, tribal wildlife conservation, beaver dam analogs, carbon credits on rangelands, conservation leasing, water rights from retiring coal plants, a program to have prisoners grow and plant sagebrush, wind energy development impacts on golden eagles, and more. View >
AUTHORS: Janey Fugate, Temple Stoellinger, Tesia Lin, Birch Malotky, Samuel Western, Emilene Ostlind, Randy Rea, Kristen Pope, Frani Halperin, Jill Bergman, Corrie Knapp, and John Koprowski
DATE: 2023
KEYWORDS: Conservation, economics, culture, ecology, carbon markets, agriculture, revitalization,
community, climate change, children, wind energy, eagles, renewable energy, sagebrush,
prisons, prisoners, sustainable destination, coal fired power plant, water rights,
public lands, leasing, natural resource
Researchers at the Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources analyzed outcomes for livestock operations and land-use following compensated waivers of public lands grazing permits. View >
AUTHORS: Drew Bennett and Tessa Wittman
DATE: 2022
KEYWORDS: Whitney MacMillan Private Lands Stewardship Program, wildlife, ranching, land development, wildlife conflict, agriculture, ranch, private land, conservation, public lands, public land grazing
Public land management increasingly warrants novel approaches for engaging communities and the public. Digital storytelling is an emerging tool that can support collaborative and sustainable management of public lands. This toolkit provides a source of information and a guide for land managers interested in using digital storytelling to engage stakeholders. There is no single way to use the toolkit; land managers should adapt and apply these guidelines as they see fit. View >
This report emerged from the Pole Mountain Gateways Digital Stories and Story Map project with the US Forest Service. View the Story Map >
Budowle et al. also published in the Journal of Park and Recreation Administration. View the article >
AUTHORS: Angus McReynolds and Rachael Budowle
DATE: March 2022
KEYWORDS: Digital storytelling, collaboration, land management, stakeholders, public lands, values, decision-making, recreation, sustainability, narrative, community-driven, best practices
From water rights to mining, logging, grazing, and oil-and-gas leases, private parties are usually granted rights to public natural resources on a use-it-or-lose-it basis; if they don’t divert, mine, log, graze, harvest, or extract, the lease may be forfeited. As such, conservation interests are unable to acquire public natural resource rights directly from the market, even when they are willing to pay more than resource developers. The authors of this study held listening sessions, analyzed economic and legal literature, and looked at relevant statutes and regulations to understand what would be involved—and what potential side effects might be—if "non-use" rights were recognized. They found that letting conservation interests purchase natural resource rights could provide a market-based alternative to top-down regulation when navigating multiple uses on public land. The authors also outlined a series of potential pitfalls and called for further research. View >
AUTHORS: Report by Bryan Leonard, Shawn Regan, Christopher Costello, Suzi Kerr, Dominic P. Parker, Andrew J. Plantinga, James Salzman, V. Kerry Smith, and Temple Stoellinger; brief by Birch Malotky
DATE: 2021 (updated 2023)
KEYWORDS: Conservation, public lands, natural resources, rights, economics, law, regulations, government
The Ruckelshaus Institute convened a collaborative process to generate proactive policy recommendations for the State of Wyoming in siting future renewable energy projects. Invited participants in the Wyoming Renewable Energy Siting Collaborative represented a diverse range of stakeholders and interests, including private landowners and ranchers, wildlife and environmental organizations, renewable energy trade associations, individual project developers, and county governments. The goal of the collaborative was to provide and develop recommendations primarily for consideration by state leadership. View >
AUTHORS: Steve Smutko, Chris Brown, John Burrows, Kara Choquette, Rod Fisher, Sue Jones, Jen Lamb, Jim Magagna, Christine Mikell, Travis McNiven
DATE: 2021
KEYWORDS: Renewable energy, solar, wind, energy generation, siting, regulation, policy, Wyoming, collaboration, collaborative, strategy, private property, public lands, federally managed lands, mitigation
This issue takes on the emerging field of road ecology to try to understand ways researchers are learning about how roads interact with the landscapes they cross and to explore new ideas for mitigating ecological damage caused by roads while making them safer for drivers and wildlife. Articles cover such topics as impacts of noise from roads, ideas for protecting dragonflies from vehicle mortalities, new materials for wildlife highway crossing structures, and an in-depth investigation of how to address the Interstate 80 barrier to migrating big game species in Wyoming. View >
AUTHORS: Kristen Pope, Morgan Heim, Birch Malotky, Rhiannon Jakopak, Amber Furness, Gregory Nickerson, Kylie Mohr, Claire Giordano, Aubin Douglas, Tessa Wittman, Nathan C. Martin, Meghan Kent, Manasseh Franklin, and Corinna Riginos
DATE: 2021
KEYWORDS: Roads, highways, crossing structures, wildlife, ecology, science, noise, infrastructure, development, building, design, roadkill, amphibian, dragonfly, engineer, interstate, management, non-motorized recreation, movements
Wyoming’s surface water quality standards (SWQS), Chapter 1 of the Water Quality Rules, include designated uses, water quality criteria and antidegradation provisions to ensure that the state’s streams, lakes, and wetlands support their appropriate uses. The federal Clean Water Act directs states to review their SWQS at least once every three years, known as a triennial review. The Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality decided to pursue a collaborative public process that utilized a group of representative stakeholders to provide input, perspectives, and suggestions to inform WDEQ’s triennial review of the SWQS. This collaborative process report provides a summary of the situation assessment’s outcomes, a description of the collaborative learning process, and the outcomes of those deliberations. View >
AUTHORS: Dr. Jessica Western
DATE: September 2021
KEYWORDS: Collaboration, water quality, surface water, standards, review, Wyoming
This report provides an overview and summary of the Conservation Conversations webinar series that took place from July through October 2020 hosted by the Ruckelshaus Institute in partnership with a coalition of eight university centers throughout the western United States. The series explored conservation challenges of the future and identified specific policies, programs, and strategies to help secure the long-term health of the nation's natural resources, wildlife, and landscapes. View >
DATE: January 2021
KEYWORDS: Conservation, conversations, webinar, challenges, economy, environment, biodiversity, rural, tribes, public lands, wildfire, management, migration, climate, justice, equity, Indigenous, recreation, parks
This brief summarizes a two-year study that was a collaboration between the University of Wyoming's School of Energy Resources and Ruckelshaus Institute to explore Wyoming residents' perceptions about the state's energy future. The research describes Wyoming citizens' vision for an energy future that is all-inclusive, innovative, and forward-looking. View >
AUTHORS: Research brief by Kit Freedman
DATE: November 2020
KEYWORDS: Energy, energy development, Wyoming, future, oil, coal, natural gas, renewable energy, solar, wind, nuclear, social license, energy future, Q-study, survey, SER
This report summarizes results from a two-phase study by the University of Wyoming's School of Energy Resources and Ruckelshaus Institute that explores Wyoming residents' values, beliefs, and perceptions regarding the future of the state's energy economy. The purpose of the study was to examine Wyoming citizens' acceptance and approval of different energy future scenarios to provide a better understanding of what Wyoming residents envision for the future. View >
AUTHORS: Jessica Western and Selena Gerace
DATE: November 2020
KEYWORDS: Energy, energy development, Wyoming, future, oil, coal, natural gas, renewable energy, nuclear, social license, energy future, Q-study, survey, SER
Economies including agriculture and recreation rely on public lands, yet permittees are limited in the decisions they can make on these lands. Land management agencies like the Bureau of Land Management have the sole authority to make management choices which directly impact land users. Researchers recognized a need to determine to what extent public land users are vulnerable to climate change, and how public land management agencies can adapt and facilitate the adaptation of permittees. View >
AUTHORS: Paper by Corrine Noel Knapp, Shannon M. McNeely, John Gioia, Trevor Even, and Tyler Beeton, brief by Meghan Kent
DATE: August 2020
KEYWORDS: Climate change, agriculture, ranching, grazing, BLM, Bureau of Land Management, water, fishing, recreation, rafting, public lands, permitting, permittees, drought, adaptation
In late 2018, the Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources at the University of Wyoming entered an agreement with the Wyoming Game and Fish Department to facilitate a collaborative public process to explore management options and seek consensus regarding strategies to reduce the prevalence of Chronic Wasting Disease in Wyoming’s ungulate populations. This report describes the structure and outcomes of that process. View >
AUTHORS: Jessica Western
DATE: July 2020
KEYWORDS: Collaborative solutions, collaboration, wildlife, disease, management, process, public, solutions, recommendations, ungulates
Rural voters in the American West have a strong commitment to environmental protections and conservation. This finding holds true even when protections may negatively impact economic growth, although voters expressed serious reservations about governmental oversight. This study analyzed data collected through a poll of over 1,800 voters nationwide as well as findings from focus groups with voters in eight Western states. Researchers compared the attitudes of rural and urban voters to understand differences and common ground in environmental policy preferences. View >
AUTHORS: Robert Bonnie, executive in residence in the Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions at Duke University; Drew Bennett, MacMillan Professor of Practice in the UW Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources; Emily Pechar Diamond, assistant professor of communication studies at the University of Rhode Island; Elizabeth Rowe, Master of Environmental Management degree candidate in the Nicholas School of the Environment at Duke University
DATE: July 2020
KEYWORDS: Conservation, environment, rural, West, poll, focus groups, voters, federal landd, private land, open space, policy, government, protection, rural/urban divide, economy
In May 2019, the University of Wyoming’s Haub School and Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources and College of Law, along with Texas A&M University’s Natural Resources Institute and School of Law, convened a workshop that brought together 22 federal ESA and state wildlife conservation experts to reimagine the state-federal relationship and discuss opportunities for states to engage more meaningfully in species conservation efforts. This remarkable conversation resulted in a series of agreements in principle that state and federal agencies can collaboratively take to improve species conservation on the ground. View the report or the workshop website >
AUTHORS: Temple Stoellinger, Michael Brennan, Sara Brodnax, Ya-Wei Li, Murray Feldman, and Bob Budd
DATE: 2020
KEYWORDS: Endangered Species Act, endangered species, threatened species, state, federal, agency, conservation, recovery, wildlife, policy, collaboration
Summary of agreements in principle from the May 2019 workshop that brought together 22 federal ESA and state wildlife conservation experts to reimagine the state-federal relationship and discuss opportunities for states to engage more meaningfully in species conservation efforts. Also includes next steps highlighting agreements in principle of interest to particular stakeholder groups. View >
AUTHORS: Emilene Ostlind, Temple Stoellinger, and Sara Brodnax
DATE: 2020
KEYWORDS: Endangered Species Act, endangered species, threatened species, state, federal, agency, conservation, recovery, wildlife, policy, collaboration
Tens of thousands of invasive species—from cheatgrass, blights, and tamarisk to hogs, fire ants, and boa constrictors—damage natural ecosystems, agricultural systems, human-built infrastructure, and even public health throughout the United States, costing billions of dollars each year. In the American West, invasive species present some of the biggest and most complex environment and natural resources challenges we face today. Addressing them requires not only huge investments of money and human capacity but also creative thinking and innovative approaches. View >
AUTHORS: Bonnie Heidel, Sarah Jane Keller, Tessa Wittman, Sara Teter, Emilene Ostlind, Aubin Douglas, Kristen Pope, Ben Johnson, Maria Anderson, Sally Leaf, Emily Reed, Melinda Harm Benson, and Governor Mark Gordon
DATE: 2020
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence magazine, invasive species, native species, conservation, wildlife, vegetation, weeds, agriculture, management, science, water, aquatic, exotic species, cheatgrass, mussels, bees, mountain goats, big horn sheep, fish, pets, strategy
This summary provides results from a survey conducted by researchers at the University of Wyoming’s Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources and School of Energy Resources of Wyoming residents’ values and beliefs related to the state's energy future. Part of a two-phased social science study of values and beliefs regarding the future of energy production and development among Wyoming residents, future analyses will explore the relationship between demographic data and the values and beliefs measured in the survey. The second phase of this study slated for summer 2020 will consist of interviews with individuals involved in and/or who are negatively or positively affected by energy production in Wyoming to explore the reasons for these survey results. A full report is expected fall 2020. View >
AUTHORS: Jessica Western and Selena Gerace
DATE: 2020
KEYWORDS: SER, Wyoming, energy, future, coal, mining, oil, gas, wind, solar
The Ruckelshaus Institute in partnership with the National Wildlife Federation, the Western Landowners Alliance, the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, and The Pew Charitable Trusts convened workshops in Idaho, Oregon and Nevada to bring stakeholders together to discuss big game migration corridor management. The purpose of the workshops was to open a dialogue around management and conservation of wildlife migration corridors, find common ground on potential actions, and identify fruitful next steps for managing and conserving wildlife migration corridors in the West. View >
AUTHORS: L. Steven Smutko and Nicole M. Gautier
DATE: 2020
KEYWORDS: Collaboration, wildlife, migration, big game, agriculture, ranch, private land, conservation
Researchers at the Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources interviewed landowners and agency personnel with a stake in migration corridor conservation to capture local attitudes and opinions towards big game migration corridor management and conservation. View >
AUTHORS: Drew Bennett and Nicole Gautier
DATE: 2019
KEYWORDS: Whitney MacMillan Private Lands Stewardship Program, wildlife, migration, big game, agriculture, ranch, private land, conservation
The authors of this study investigated how participants’ stories about gardens are rooted in family relationships, knowledge, and practices through time. In present, past, future, and cross-generational frames, families transmitted resilience through gardening across generations. View >
AUTHORS: Paper by Rachael Budowle, Melvin L. Arthur, and Christine M. Porter, brief by Rachael Budowle and Kit Freedman
DATE: 2019
KEYWORDS: Resilience, home garden, food, sovereignty, sustainability, Wind River, Eastern Shoshone, Northern Arapaho, reservation, tribes, indigenous, health
Antiquated leasing systems bar conservation interests from acquiring public natural resource rights directly, even when they are willing to pay more than extractive industries. Letting conservation interests purchase natural resource rights could benefit state and federal governments and lead to more secure, less fractious conservation outcomes. View >
AUTHORS: Report by Bryan Leonard, Shawn Regan, Christopher Costello, Suzi Kerr, Dominic P. Parker, Andrew J. Plantinga, James Salzman, V. Kerry Smith, and Temple Stoellinger; brief by Birch Malotky
DATE: 2021
KEYWORDS: Conservation, public lands, natural resources, rights, economics, law, regulations, government
In this study, the authors explore a proposal to collect a “conservation fee” from visitors to Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks by assessing different options such a fee, examining the legal hurdles to these options, and analyzing their various revenue generating capacities. View >
AUTHORS: Arthur Middleton, Temple Stoellinger, Bryan Leonard, Harshad Karandikar, Holly Doremus, Claire Kremen; brief by Emilene Ostlind, Temple Stoellinger, and Arthur Middleton
DATE: 2020
KEYWORDS: Research brief, wildlife, tourism, economics, law, conservation, policy
The Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies funded the Ruckelshaus Institute at the University of Wyoming to conduct research on the social science research needs and priorities to help natural resource managers integrate social and ecological perspectives into more comprehensive sagebrush management strategies. View >
AUTHORS: Jessica Western, Drew Bennett, Claire Barnwell, Kit Freedman, Steve Smutko, and Tessa Wittman
DATE: September 2019
KEYWORDS: Social science, ecosystem, management, sagebrush, wildlife, conservation, public lands, reso
Hunting can reduce mountain sheep horn size by removing older animals from a population and skewing the herd toward younger animals with smaller horns or by removing animals with genetic material for large horns from the herd. Researchers at the Haub School examined tens of thousands of harvest records of bighorn sheep from the western US and Canada to determine whether hunting pressure was causing genetic change in bighorn sheep herds. View >
AUTHORS: Tayler LaSharr, Ryan Long, James Heffelfinger, Vernon Bleich, Paul Krausman, Terry Bowyer, Justin Shannon, Robert Klaver, Clay Brewer, Mike Cox, Andrew Holland, Anne Hubbs, Jonathan Muir, Bruce Sterling, Kevin Monteith; brief by Rhiannon Jakopak and Tayler LaSharr
DATE: 2019
KEYWORDS: Research brief, wildlife, conservation, management, hunting
This study used camera traps to collect visitor use data near the summit of Longs Peak in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, to determine if counts from near the trailhead could accurately estimate use at the summit and to provide a framework for using data from a lower elevation, easily accessible area to estimate visitor use in remote, high-elevation locations. View >
AUTHORS: Dave Pettebone, Ashley D’Antonio, Abigail Sisneros-Kidd, and Christopher Monz; brief by Abigail Sisneros-Kidd and Emilene Ostlind
DATE: 2019
KEYWORDS: Research brief, outdoor recreation, tourism, alpine, management, trail use, visitors
A report on public opinion involving conservation: Nine out of ten Wyoming voters said conservation issues involving public lands, waters, and wildlife are as important, if not more important, than other issues related to the economy, health care, and education, when deciding whether to support an elected official.
View the poll release presentation slides >
AUTHORS: Kit Freedman
DATE: 2019
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, agriculture, sustainability, public opinion, voting, conservation, public lands, water, wildlife
An online focus group of 20 Wyoming residents and a statewide poll of 400 Wyoming registered voters surveyed public attitudes on wildlife and issues related to wildlife migration corridors. Results showed support for a range of policies to conserve big game migration corridors, but the intensity of support declined for policies perceived to negatively impact the state’s economy.
View the poll release presentation slides >
AUTHORS: Nicole M. Gautier, Drew E. Bennett, and Robert Bonnie
DATE: 2019
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, wildlife, open spaces, conservation, migration
The Ruckelshaus Institute and the Wyoming Natural Diversity Database wrote a Natural Resource Condition Assessment for Agate Fossil Beds National Monument. The NRCA assesses current conditions for important natural resources, identifies data gaps, and describes factors influencing park resource conditions. View >
AUTHORS: Reilly Dibner, Nicole Korfanta, and Gary Beauvais
DATE: 2018
CATEGORIES: Natural Resource Conservation Assessment, Wyoming Natural Diversity Database, Agate Fossil Beds National Monument, conservation, assessment, NRCA
The Ruckelshaus Institute and the Wyoming Natural Diversity Database wrote a Natural Resource Condition Assessment for Badlands National Park. The NRCA assesses current conditions for important natural resources, identifies data gaps, and describes factors influencing park resource conditions. View >
AUTHORS: Reilly Dibner, Nicole Korfanta, and Gary Beauvais
DATE: 2018
CATEGORIES: Natural Resource Conservation Assessment, Wyoming Natural Diversity Database, Badlands National Park, conservation, assessment, NRCA
The Ruckelshaus Institute and the Wyoming Natural Diversity Database wrote a Natural Resource Condition Assessment for the Fort Laramie National Historic Site. The NRCA assesses current conditions for important natural resources, identifies data gaps, and describes factors influencing park resource conditions. View >
AUTHORS: Reilly Dibner, Nicole Korfanta, and Gary Beauvais
DATE: 2018
CATEGORIES: Natural Resource Conservation Assessment, Wyoming Natural Diversity Database, Fort Laramie National Historic Site, conservation, assessment, NRCA
Issue 09, 2018
Why We Have Federal Lands: The citizens and leaders behind our public land heritage By Chris Madson
Banking on Trails: Laramie could be the next western town to cash in on public lands
recreation By Kit Freedman
Rebel Yell: Why the Sagebrush Rebellion didn't end with Malheur By McGreggor Cawley
View >
AUTHORS: Chris Madson, Kit Freedman, McGreggor Cawley, and others; edited by Emilene Ostlind and Nicole Korfanta
DATE: 2018
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence, public lands, sagebrush, Laramie, Wyoming, recreation, outdoor recreation
Issue 08, 2018
Return of the Grizzly: No longer federally protected, is the great bear ready to strike
out on its own? By Manasseh Franklin
Collaborate or Litigate: Local collaboration faces off against outsider litigation
in the long, slow process to help a threatened species By Courtney Carlson
Endlings By Alec Osthoff View >
AUTHORS: Manasseh Franklin, Courtney Carlson, Alec Osthoff, and others; edited by Emilene Ostlind and Nicole Korfanta
DATE: 2018
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence, , collaboration, conservation, endangered species, threatened species
A report on the population growth in Wyoming from 2010-2015. View >
AUTHORS: David T. Taylor and Nicole Korfanta
DATE: 2018
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, population
The Ruckelshaus Institute and the Wyoming Natural Diversity Database wrote a Natural Resource Condition Assessment for Scotts Bluff National Monument. The NRCA assesses current conditions for important natural resources, identifies data gaps, and describes factors influencing park resource conditions. View >
AUTHORS: Reilly Dibner, Nicole Korfanta, and Gary Beauvais
DATE: 2018
KEYWORDS: Natural Resource Conservation Assessment, Wyoming Natural Diversity Database, Scotts Bluff National Monument, conservation, assessment, NRCA
This publication provides a basic background of the legal foundation upon which planning is built in Wyoming. It is the third in a series of articles on land use and community planning in Wyoming. View >
AUTHORS: William J. Gribb and Jeffrey D. Hamerlinck
DATE: 2018
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, planning, land planning, community planning, Wyoming
This study assesses familiarity with seven private land conservation strategies to identify knowledge gaps and provide expert opinion on how well these tools work. View >
AUTHORS: Drew Bennett, Liba Pejchar, Beth Romero, Richard Knight, Joel Berger; brief by Sara Teter
DATE: 2018
KEYWORDS: Research brief, conservation, private lands
This research brief summarizes a legal analysis exploring the legislative history of the Endangered Species Act and making an argument for strengthening the role of states in conserving listed species. View >
AUTHORS: Temple Stoellinger; brief by Emilene Ostlind and Temple Stoellinger
DATE: 2018
KEYWORDS: Research brief, environmetal law, endangered species, sage grouse, conservation, policy, threatened species
This report takes inventory of the types of resources, ecosystem services, and public benefits protected from development by conservation easements in Wyoming. View >
AUTHORS: Nicole Korfanta, Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources; Benjamin Rashford, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, University of Wyoming; Amy Pocewicz, US Fish and Wildlife Serivce; Eric Schacht and Bo Alley, Wyoming Stock Growers Land Trust; and James Luchsinger, The Nature Conservancy in Wyoming
DATE: 2018
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, public opinion, voting, conservation, agriculture, ecosystem services, private lands
Researchers used telemetry data from 184 deer across a 17-year period to determine whether deer habituated to energy development and if their response varied with winter severity. They found that mule deer did not habituate to gas development, and the population declined by 36 percent despite aggressive on-site mitigation efforts and a 45 percent reduction in deer harvest. View >
AUTHORS: Hall Sawyer, Nicole Korfanta, Ryan Nielson, Kevin Monteith, Dale Strickland; brief by Kit Freedman
DATE: 2017
KEYWORDS: Research brief, wildlife, energy development, conservation, mule deer, natural gas, habitat
In the fall of 2016, Friend of Fish Creek asked the University of Wyoming Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources to prepare a memorandum detailing the legal and regulatory background of water quality law in Wyoming. This document includes a background section on water quality law at the federal, state, and local levels, and delves into legal questions surrounding regulation of water contamination in the Fish Creek watershed. View >
AUTHORS: Micah Christensen, University of Wyoming College of Law Student; Conner Nicklas, University of Wyoming College of Law Student; and Temple Stoellinger, Assistant Professor Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources
DATE: 2017
KEYWORDS: Water, law, regulation, community, pollution, contamination, quality, legal analysis, Fish Creek, Wyoming, septic
Issue 07, 2017
Carbon Capture: Wyoming Could Lead the World to a Clean Energy Future By Emilene Ostlind
Turbines on the Horizon: How the Western Grid Could Unlock Wyoming's Wind Energy By Nicole Korfanta
The Next Frontier: Net-Zero Energy Homes in Wyoming By Kit Freedman
View >
AUTHORS: Emilene Ostlind, Nicole Korfanta, Kit Freedman, and others; edited by Emilene Ostlind and Nicole Korfanta
DATE: 2017
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence, energy, renewable energy, wind, wind turbines, Wyoming, power, solar, carbon
The goal of this document is to provide an overview of the origins, purpose, process, and benefits of local government land-use planning in Wyoming to empower citizens to become part of the process in their local communities. View >
AUTHORS: William J. Gribb and Jeffrey D. Hamerlinck
DATE: 2016
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, planning, land planning, community planning, local governance
Issue 06, 2016
How Ranchers Make Ends Meet in the Twenty-First Century By Geoff O'Gara
Carnivores, Not Condos: Ranches Provide Key Wildlife Passages Between Two Protected
Ecosystems By Sarah Jane Keller
Conservation Easements: An Open Spaces Protection Tool Worth Reforming By Emilene Ostlind
View >
AUTHORS: Geoff O'Gara, Sarah Jane Keller, Emilene Ostlind, and others; edited by Emilene Ostlind and Nicole Korfanta
DATE: 2016
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence, private lands, conservation, cowboy, ranch, flood irrigation, trespass, drought, tribe
Issue 05, 2016
Can a Tourist-Driven Economy Fill the Gap as Energy Revenue Falters? By Samuel Western
National Parks Respond to Climate Change By Kristen Pope
The Booming Business of Antler Hunting on Private Lands By Nicole Korfanta
View >
AUTHORS: Samuel Western, Kristen Pope, Nicole Korfanta and others; edited by Emilene Ostlind and Nicole Korfanta
DATE: 2016
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence, tourism, economics, outdoor recreation, wildlife, winter, camping, national park, horses
Governor Matt Mead created the Task Force on Forests in 2013 to study the benefits forests provide, and analyze and consider new response strategies and recommendations for both active and passive management. The Forest Task Force reached consensus on 12 major recommendations comprising 53 sub-recommendations, for the Governor’s consideration. View >
AUTHORS: Jessica Clement, Anna Cleveland, and Steve Smutko
DATE: 2015
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, government, governor, forests, forest task force
In 2008 the U.S. Forest Service updated its National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) procedures to permit a more iterative approach that facilitates collaborative public engagement. This workshop brought together experienced NEPA practitioners to discuss integrating iNEPA into agency practice. The document outlines iNEPA, its legal foundations, collaborative approaches to the process, and opportunities and challenges related to iNEPA. View >
AUTHORS: Jessica M. Clement, Kit S. Freedman, David Loomis, Joe Carbone, et al.
DATE: 2015
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, NEPA, iNEPA, USFS, US Forest Service, National Environmental Policy Act, land use, management
To help the road planning process for the Pole Mountain Unit, five short videos show Forest Service staff members describing how the road system on the Laramie Ranger District of the Medicine Bow National Forest interacts with the surrounding ecosystem and the types of public input they were looking for. View >
AUTHORS: Kit Freedman and Emilene Ostlind
DATE: 2015
KEYWORDS: Video series, pole mountain, forest service, ecosystem, Medicine Bow, national forest, Laramie ranger district, travel management, road, camping
This bulletin examines how different patterns of housing development in the WUI influence firefighting costs in the Rocky Mountain West and explores ways local governments could increase firefighting efficiency through strategic land use planning. View >
AUTHORS: Anna M. Scofield, Benjamin S. Rashford, Donald M. McLeod, Roger H. Coupal, Scott N. Lieske, and Shannon E. Albeke
DATE: 2015
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, planning, land planning, community, Rocky Mountains, west, fire, firefighting, development, house, home
The Medicine Bow Conservation District contracted the Ruckelshaus Institute to produce a poster and brochure to raise awareness and help landowners and conservation groups create inexpensive fence markers to reduce sage grouse mortality. View >
DATE: 2015
KEYWORDS: Poster, sage grouse, wildlife, fence, private land, conservation
The objective of this bulletin is to demonstrate how residential development potential of private agricultural land can be used to better target conservation easements to achieve the maximum benefit for wildlife given limited conservation dollars. View >
AUTHORS: Benjamin S. Rashford, Abigail M. Scott, Matthew Hayes, and Hall Sawyer
DATE: 2015
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, land planning, community planning, wildlife, conservation, agriculture, private land
Issue 04, 2015
Two Migrations: The Splash of One Fish Ripples Through an Ecosystem By Charlie Reinertsen
The Feedgrounds Conundrum: Brucellosis Spreads By Emilene Ostlind
Bird v. Bird: Sage Grouse and Their Avian Predators By Sarah Gilman
View >
AUTHORS: Charlie Reinertsen, Emilene Ostlind, Sarah Gilman, and others; edited by Emilene Ostlind
DATE: 2015
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence, wildlife, habitat, disease, ecosystem, sagebrush, sage grouse, conservation, trout, elk, grizzly, migration, wind energy, birds, ants, energy
Issue 03, 2015
One Irrigator's Waste is Another's Supply By Ariana Brocious
Supercomputer-Powered Model Improves Water Planning By Stephanie Paige Ogburn
Aquifer Recharge: Underground Storage Helps Sustain Water Supplies By Emilene Ostlind
View >
AUTHORS: Ariana Brocious, Stephanie Paige Ogburn, Emilene Ostlind, and others; edited by Emilene Ostlind
DATE: 2015
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence, water, aquifer, irrigation, flood, modeling, return flow, beaver, snow, diversion, conservation, sagebrush
Issue 02, 2014
Beetle-Kill Fuels Bioenergy By Kelly Hatton
The Economics of Protecting Homes in the Wildland-Urban Interface By Samuel Western
If Beetle-Killed Trees Aren't Using Water, Where Is It Going? By Liz Nysson
View >
AUTHORS: Kelly Hatton, Samuel Western, Liz Nysson, and others; edited by Emilene Ostlind
DATE: 2014
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence, bark beetle, beetle kill, trees, water, research, forests, Rocky Mountains, energy
The Medicine Bow-Routt National Forests contracted the Ruckelshaus Institute to produce public outreach materials that would help forest visitors understand the bark beetle outbreak. In partnership with the U.S. Forest Service, we produced ten short films exploring how the bark beetle outbreak affects fire, water, recreation, and other aspects of the forest. View >
AUTHORS: Morgan Heim, Emilene Ostlind, and Aaron Voos
DATE: 2014
KEYWORDS: Video series, bark beetle, national forest, Medicine Bow National Forest, Routt National Forest, U.S. Forest Service, Wyoming, Colorado, trees, fire, wildlife, water, hunting, timber, resources
A report on public opinion involving conservation: Statewide poll results reflected Wyomingites’ views that the current and future condition of the state and its resources remains positive. Overall, voters displayed a strong interest in conservation and were in favor of dedicating additional state funds to protect land, air, water, wildlife habitat, and ranchlands in Wyoming. View >
AUTHORS: Kit Freedman and Nicole Korfanta
DATE: 2014
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, public opinion, voting, conservation, public lands, water, wildlife, ranching, agriculture, sustainability
Issue 01, 2014
Greater Sage Grouse: The Bird that Brought the West Together By Mike Brennan
Cattle as Ecosystem Engineers By Justin Derner, Emily Kachergis, and David Augustine
Conservation Grazing: Ranchers Lead the Way By Emilene Ostlind
View >
AUTHORS: Mike Brennan, Justin Derner, Emily Kachergis, David Augustine, Emilene Ostlind, and others; edited by Emilene Ostlind
DATE: 2014
KEYWORDS: Western Confluence, conservation, Wyoming, ecosystem, sage grouse, weset, grazing, ranching
This bibliography, created in partnership with the Medicine Bow–Routt National Forest, highlights resources on bark beetle ecology and biology, ecological impacts and responses, management approaches and implications, and social and economic impacts and considerations of the bark beetle epidemics in the western United States and Canada. View >
AUTHORS: Gregory S. Pappas
DATE: 2013
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, forests, biology, ecology, bark beetle, land use, management
This publication contextualizes payment for ecosystem service markets and explains mitigation banking, conservation banking, and habitat exchanges and how these markets might work in Wyoming. View >
AUTHORS: Kristi Hansen, Anne Jakle, and Mary Hogarty
DATE: 2013
KEYWORDS: Energy Mitigation Initiative, conservation, ecosystem services, economics, habitat, wildlife, energy development
Summaries of expert presentations from the public forum that took place in Casper, Wyoming, in April 2013. An overview of why we need conservation finance, the basic tools and structures of conservation financing, and some of the emerging approaches to leverage private and public funds for conservation. View >
AUTHORS: Anne Jakle
DATE: 2013
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, land use, management, conservation, conservation finance
This publication provides an introduction to Wyoming’s land resources and the concept of land use, including land ownership patterns, land-use activities and functions, and the drivers behind recent land-use patterns and development trends. View >
AUTHORS: Jeffrey D. Hamerlinck, Scott N. Lieske, and William J. Gribb
DATE: 2013
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, planning, land planning, community planning, Wyoming, land-use, natural resources
This primer lays an informational foundation and understanding of terminology for mitigation stakeholders. It outlines the mitigation process (avoidance, minimization, and compensation) and sets the stage for wildlife mitigation triggers and guidelines surrounding natural gas development in Wyoming. View >
AUTHORS: Anne Jakle
DATE: 2012
KEYWORDS: Energy Mitigation Initiative, natural gas, wildlife, wildlife mitigation, conservation, energy
A report on the population growth in Wyoming from 2000-2010. View >
AUTHORS: David T. Taylor, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, and Shawn G. Lanning, Wyoming Geographic Information Science Center, University of Wyoming
DATE: 2012
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, population, growth, rural, urban
With an abundance of outdoor amenities, Wyoming is a popular place to have a temporary residence for seasonal recreation or other occasional use. Growth in the number of these “second homes” plays an important role in driving residential development in Wyoming. This is a report on second home growth in Wyoming from 2000-2010. View >
AUTHORS: David T. Taylor, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, and Shawn G. Lanning, Wyoming Geographic Information Science Center, University of Wyoming
DATE: 2012
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, population, population growth, second home, vacation home, recreation, rural, urban, development
This publication draws from scientific, working, and statutory knowledge to provide a survey of current wildlife mitigation practices for wind energy projects—both in Wyoming and outside the state. It also explores what might be next for wildlife mitigation and wind as development moves increasingly to federal lands. View >
AUTHORS: Anne Jakle
DATE: 2012
KEYWORDS: Energy Mitigation Initiative, development, wind energy, science, Wyoming, wildlife, conservation, electricity, renewable energy
This guide for landowners seeking information on commercial wind energy development outlines the process of wind energy development for landowners, highlights key issues they may face throughout the wind energy development process and describes the growing practice of landowner wind energy associations and the changing legislative landscape in the state. View >
AUTHORS: A. Jakle, M. Geiger, C. McDonough, and J. Lovato
DATE: 2011
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, energy, wind energy, wind development, wind, private land, ranch
While the mission of the WWNRT is to enhance and conserve wildlife habitat, it has also positively impacted the Wyoming economy. We conducted the analyses reported in this publication to better understand how projects funded by the WWNRT have contributed to our state’s economy. View >
AUTHORS: David T. Taylor, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, University of Wyoming; Jill Lovato, Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources, University of Wyoming; Jessica Sargent-Michaud, The Trust for Public Land; Daniel Stevens, The Trust for Public Land
DATE: 2011
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, plamming, wildlife, economy, conservation, habitat
Summary of a forum designed to answer the following key questions: 1) What is hydraulic fracturing? 2) Why and where is it used in Wyoming oil and gas development? and 3) What are the potential environmental impacts associated with its use? View >
DATE: 2011
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, energy, fracturing, hyrdraulic fracturing, oil, gas
A comprehensive resource guide for exploring land conservation options with private landowners, communities, land trusts and local planners, the toolkit provides information to help land managers engage effectively and collaboratively in ways that support the ecological sustainability and integrity of adjacent federal and state lands. View >
Private Lands Conservation Toolkit website >
AUTHORS: U.S. Forest Service and the Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources, University of Wyoming
DATE: 2011
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, land use, management, conservation, sustainability, private lands
In our Bark Beetle Management Workshop, we brought scientists and forest managers together — along with a variety of other interested stakeholders — to explore management options, share ideas, and define a vision for the future of the West’s forests. Our proceedings report the key management and research ideas. View >
AUTHORS: Anne Jakle, Sara Brown, Dan Tinker, Jill Lovato, and Nick Dobric
DATE: 2010
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, land use, management, conservation, sustainability, bark beetle, forest, tree, water, wildlife
A compressed folder containing several files including a fact sheet, concept paper, list of advisory teams, research priorities and resolutions. View >
DATE: 2010
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, wildlife, open spaces, brucellosis, Yellowstone, disease
This publication highlights the efforts of the CCC to conserve wildlife migration corridors in Sublette County, provides further explanation of how the wildlife-friendly fencing program works, and describes the context and significance of this collaborative conservation effort. View >
AUTHORS: Abby Mellinger and Diana Hulme, William D. Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources; Lara Ryan, Jordan Vana, and Katy Teson, Green River Valley Land Trust
DATE: 2010
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, planning, wildlife, economy, conservation, migration
A summary of current scientific knowledge about the implications of climate change for water resources in the West, this report should spur discussions on how to better manage Wyoming’s water resources in the face of drought and climate change. View >
AUTHORS: Stephen Grey and Chamois Andersen
DATE: 2009
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, climate change, water, resources, drought, irrigation, management, storage, diversion
A comprehensive review of land use trends in Wyoming, this document compiles eight years of collaborative research efforts by UW faculty for the Open Spaces Initiative. View >
State of the Space
AUTHORS: Diana Hulme, Chamois Andersen, Katelyn Parady, Jeff Hamerlinck, Scott Lieske, and Indy Burke
DATE: 2009
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, State of the Space, land use, agriculture, ranch, private land, public land, development, energy
Dealing with produced water quantity and quality arguably has been the most difficult of the issues surrounding coalbed methane development. This is a report on the findings of a DOE-NETL funded project focused on coalbed methane produced water management. View >
AUTHORS: Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources
DATE: 2008
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, resources, water, natural gas, energy, development, methane
The central message from this report is the need to better link local and state water planning efforts, and to identify mechanisms to chart a new course toward sustainable land and water development. The economic benefits of better coordination between water development and land use planning should also be considered. View >
AUTHORS: David Cook, Roger Coupal, Jeffrey Hamerlinck, Jenna Heerman, Diana Hulme, Scott Lieske, and Donald McLeod
DATE: 2008
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, planning, land planning, community planning, Wyoming, land-use, natural resources, water, water development
Housing and industrial development in Wyoming has been the subject of statewide polls and surveys during the past several years to assess citizen opinions on water and the preservation of Wyoming’s ranches, open spaces, wildlife habitat, and scenic vistas. This publication presents results from a poll conducted in 2007, supplemented with summaries of similar studies recently conducted in Wyoming. View >
Agricultural Sustainability
AUTHORS: Diana G. Hulme and Abigail Mellinger, Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources; Jim Magagna, Wyoming Stock Growers Association; and Andrea Erickson-Quiroz, Wyoming Chapter, The Nature Conservancy
DATE: 2008
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, agriculture, sustainability, public opinion, voting, conservation, public lands, water, wildlife, ranching, private land
In the summer of 2006, Congress passed a law that makes conservation easements more attractive and the deductions associated with donated easements more available, especially for those engaged in active farming or ranching operations. This report is an update on Wyoming's involvement. View >
AUTHORS: Nicholas M. Agopian and Melinda Harm Benson, Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources
DATE: 2007
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, conservation, agriculture, ranching, conservation easements, law
A report on the population change in Wyoming from 2000-2005. View >
AUTHORS: Scott Lieske, Wyoming Geographic Information Science Center, and David T. Taylor, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics
DATE: 2007
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, population, growth, change, rural, urban
The workshop reported here demonstrates commitment to reversing the pallid sturgeon's historic decline in the Missouri and Mississippi rivers, identifies and prioritizes research and management actions to contribute to recovery and outlines some of the challenges that remain. View >
AUTHORS: Harold L. Bergman, Ann M. Boelter, and Katelyn Parady
DATE: 2007
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, wildlife, water, sturgeon, management, river, Mississippi, Missouri
Proceedings of a working symposium held in Laramie, Wyoming, of technical experts from around the world assembled with the specific task of addressing the brucellosis vaccine, vaccine delivery and diagnostic challenges of bison and elk in the Greater Yellowstone Area. View >
AUTHORS: United States Animal Health Association Special Committee on Brucellosis in the Greater Yellowstone Area
DATE: 2006
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, wildlife, open spaces, Brucellosis, elk, bison, Yellowstone, disease, research
Proceedings of a workshop on "Water, Drought and Wyoming's Climate," to communicate understanding of climate variability related to water, discuss needs of water managers and other stakeholders and facilitate discussion and future collaboration surrounding water in Wyoming. View >
DATE: 2006
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, resources, water, climate, drought
An overview of management options for coalbed methane produced water with an emphasis on implementing potential beneficial uses for the water. View >
AUTHORS: Diana Hulme
DATE: 2005
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, water resources, water, management, energy development, natural gas, coalbed methane
A review of the benefits of coalbed methane development including labor income and tax revenues compared with the costs of that development, including but not limited to the cost of water lost and the cost of environmental impacts related to poor quality water. View >
AUTHORS: Roger Coupal
DATE: 2005
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, resources, water, management, economics, energy development, coalbed methane, natural gas
Since the publication of “Conservation Easements: an Introductory Review for Wyoming” in 2002 , a number of related questions have arisen. Questions about term easements and tax issues are covered in the original publication. This supplement addresses questions on perpetuities, mineral estates, and purchase of development rights. View >
AUTHORS: Melinda Harm Benson
DATE: 2005
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, conservation, mineral rights, split estate, law, economics, private land, development, conservation easements
The Wyoming Governor’s Office asked the University of Wyoming to address a series of questions on options for dealing with water produced through coalbed methane development. This report provides context for and answers to those questions. View >
AUTHORS: Melinda Benson, Harold Bergman, Ann Boelter, et al.
DATE: 2005
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, resources, water, drought, management, energy development, coalbed methane, natural gas, law, conservation, produced water, management, disposal
Questions sometimes arise over the relationship between Wyoming’s Rule Against Perpetuities and the use of conservation easements, which are generally held “in perpetuity.” This report is a closer examination of the meaning of “perpetuity” in each of these contexts. View >
AUTHORS: Melinda Harm Benson
DATE: 2004
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, conservation, easements, law, economics, private land
This bulletin, along with Coupal et al. 2004, represents a contribution to the analysis of land ownership and management of segments of big game habitat in Wyoming. It is intended to help integrate conservation of natural resources and rural land development more effectively by identifying areas where big game migration corridors may be threatened. View >
AUTHORS: Dennis Feeney, UW Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics; Gary Beauvais, Wyoming Natural Diversity Database; Roger Coupal, UW Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics; Shawn Lanning, UW Department of Geography; Scott Lieske, UW Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics; Nathan Nibbelink, Wyoming Geographic Information Science Center; and Kirk Nordyke, Wyoming Game and Fish Department
DATE: 2004
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, planning, Wyoming, wildlife, economy, conservation, wildlife migration, natural resources, rural
Over the past several years a number of surveys, focus groups, assessments, and polls have consistently determined that Wyoming residents believe it is important to conserve Wyoming’s working farms and ranches, water and air quality, wildlife, and the unique western culture that these lands provide. This publication presents results from a poll conducted in 2004 and summarizes information from earlier surveys and studies. View >
Agricultural Sustainability
AUTHORS: Ann M. Boelter and Kathryn D. Mays, Ruckelshaus Institute of Environment and Natural Resources
DATE: 2004
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, agriculture, sustainability, public opinion, voting, conservation, public lands, water, wildlife, ranching, private land
Proceedings from a workshop organized and facilitated by the Ruckelshaus Institute meant to help managers develop a research program to identify critical factors influencing pallid sturgeon declines and how those factors are affected by river operations and management. View >
AUTHORS: Quist, M.C., A.M. Boelter, J.M. Lovato, N.M. Korfanta, et al.
DATE: 2004
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, wildlife, open spaces, sturgeon, management, rivers, river management, Missouri River, fish
This publication describes the relationships among private lands, public lands, and seasonal range as well as the economic importance of private lands in providing seasonal habitat for six major big game species in Wyoming: pronghorn, elk, moose, bighorn sheep, mule deer, and white-tailed deer. This analysis was conducted to assess some of the potential consequences of habitat loss on private lands due to rural land development. View >
AUTHORS: Roger Coupal, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics; Gary Beauvais, Wyoming Natural Diversity Database; and Dennis Feeney and Scott Lieske, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics
DATE: 2004
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, wildlife, economy, conservation, wildlife migration, public lands, private land, elk, moose, mule deer, pronghorn, white-tailed deer, mule deer, bighorn sheep
Out of economic necessity, most agricultural operations in the West cover large areas, and thus agriculture contributes substantially to maintaining open spaces on private ranch and farm lands. This bulletin looks at the role that agriculture plays in maintaining open spaces in Wyoming View >
Agricultural Sustainability
AUTHORS: David T. Taylor, UW Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics
DATE: 2003
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, agriculture, sustainability, public opinion, voting, conservation, public lands, water, wildlife, ranching
This report details the results of a pilot project to promote Community VizTM based planning support systems in Wyoming. Phase I was a “proof of concept” pilot project set in Albany County in southeastern Wyoming to demonstrate the application of Community VizTM to a Wyoming-specific issue and to determine potential challenges. View >
AUTHORS: Scott N. Lieske, Steve Mullen, Mike Knapp, Jeffrey D. Hamerlinck
DATE: 2003
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, land use, management, conservation, GIS, water, aquifer, irrigation
In the rural West, including Wyoming, the purpose of many conservation easements is to protect the land’s agricultural use and open space. This is a review of Wyoming's conservation easements View >
AUTHORS: Allison Perrigo and Jon Iversen
DATE: 2002
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, conservation, agriculture, conservation easements, private land, agriculture, ranch
A report on the population change in Wyoming from 1990-2000. View >
AUTHORS: David T. Taylor and Scott Lieske, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, University of Wyoming
DATE: 2002
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, population, growth, change, rural, urban
There are many options for preserving open space. This bulletin focuses on mechanisms that have been used in Wyoming and elsewhere to generate public funds for protecting open space. View >
AUTHORS: Jon Iversen, Allison Perrigo
DATE: 2002
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, conservation, private lands, funding, economics, tools, law, ranch, agriculture, sustainability
With an abundance of outdoor amenities, Wyoming is a popular place to have a temporary residence for seasonal recreation or other occasional use. Growth in the number of these “second homes” plays an important role in driving residential development in Wyoming. This is a report on second home growth in Wyoming from 1990-2000. View >
AUTHORS: David T. Taylor and Scott Lieske, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, University of Wyoming
DATE: 2002
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, planning, land planning, community planning, Wyoming, land-use, vacation home, second home, outdoors, recreation, rural, urban
The changes that occur when rural agricultural lands are converted to residential use have become an increasingly important issue in many counties throughout the United States. This is a report on the cost of community services for rural residential development in Wyoming. View >
AUTHORS: Roger Coupal, David T. Taylor, and Don McLeod, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics
DATE: 2002
KEYWORDS: Wyoming Open Spaces Initiative, planning, land planning, community planning, Wyoming, land-use, community services, rural, farm, agriculture, development
ENR surveyed Wyoming citizens about whether opportunities for collaboration and consensus building should be enhanced in Wyoming. The final report discusses the issues related to consensus building and collaboration, and offers a series of next steps to use the existing wealth of knowledge, skills and resources present in Wyoming to meet the identified needs. View >
AUTHORS: Andrea Brandenburg and Ann Boelter
DATE: 2000
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, conservation, collaboration, collaborative, process, solutions
Based on interviews with over 130 individuals, this report describes the range of interests and concerns surrounding elk and bison herds in the Jackson, Wyoming, area and provides recommendations for developing a public involvement strategy for their management. View >
AUTHORS: The US Institute for Environmental Conflict Resolution, The University of Wyoming's Institute for Environment and Natural Resources, The Meridian Institute
DATE: 2000
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, wildlife, open spaces, bison, elk, wildlife management, Jackson, public, disease, national park
This document summarizes a workshop co-sponsored by Environment and Natural Resources and the O’Connor Center for the Rocky Mountain West on “Communication and Consensus: Strategies for Fulfilling the Nation’s Environmental Policy." It explores the potential role of collaborative problem solving processes in the implementation of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and makes a number of observations and recommendations which, when taken as a whole, can significantly improve the administration of this far-reaching law. View >
AUTHORS: O’Connor Center for the Rocky Mountain West at The University of Montana and The Institute for Environment and Natural Resources at The University of Wyoming
DATE: 2000
KEYWORDS: Reports and proceedings, Rocky Mountains, NEPA, collaboration, decision-making, National Environmental Policy Act, process, management