Environment General Courses (ENVIRON)
graduate level, taught in Durham
298.16 The Practice
of Land Conservation
Organizers: Ron Sutherland
(5th-year Ph.D. Student) and Dean Urban (Faculty
Sponsor)
Motivation for developing a new course: Many
of the MEM students interested in nature conservation
will end up working for land trusts and other
similar non-profit and government agencies after
they graduate from the Nicholas School. Although
we offer a range of courses on the theoretical
and quantitative aspects of conservation biology
and ecosystem management, we do not currently
offer a course designed specifically to introduce
students to the practical side of land conservation.
This is a serious gap in our curriculum, especially
since the MEM program is intended to serve as
a practice-based professional degree program.
If we were to offer a high-quality overview of
the applied skills and techniques needed by Nicholas
School students to succeed as leaders of the
modern land conservation movement, we predict
such a course would be extremely popular and
well-received. A "Practice of Land Conservation" course
would also strategically place the Nicholas School
well in the forefront of conservation education
institutions.
Course Objectives:
1. During the course students
will achieve familiarity with the basic inner
workings of a nonprofit land conservation agency
(land trust).
2. Students will emerge
from the course with an appreciation of the
daily challenges facing professional staff
at land trusts.
3. Students will also learn
which skills and techniques they should cultivate
to maximize their chances for professional
success in the land conservation field.
Format of the Course: The initial
trial version of the course would be a one-credit
seminar offered in the middle of the Spring 2007
Semester (mid-February to mid-March). We would
meet twice per week for four weeks, and each
class would last an hour and a half. A typical
class would include a 45 minute-long guest lecture
presented by a land conservation professional,
followed up by 45 minutes of in-class discussion
and group-based activities designed to give the
students hands-on experience practicing the skills
or concepts described by the guest lecturer.
The guest lectures would be open to the public,
as they are likely to be of general interest
across the Nicholas School conservation community.
Readings would be assigned for each topic when
available.
Student Assessment: Grades
would be based on class participation (20%),
two short 2-3 page individual writing assignments
(40%) and a small practice-oriented group project
(40%). The group projects will focus on solving
practical challenges facing local or national
land trusts working in North Carolina.
Guest Speakers: Guest speakers
for the class will be recruited from the broad
array of land conservation nonprofits operating
locally in North Carolina. We anticipate making
excellent use of the Nicholas School’s extensive
network of alumni already working in the field.
Draft Schedule of Class Topics
Class |
Date
(M/W) |
Topic |
1 |
12-Feb |
Introduction
to Land Trusts |
2 |
14-Feb |
Working
with private landowners |
3 |
19-Feb |
Fundraising:
Donors, grants, and bonds |
4 |
22-Feb |
Conservation
Real Estate 1:Appraisals and Fee Simple
Transactions |
FT |
24-Feb |
Saturday
Field Trip: Maple View Farms Easement Tour |
5 |
26-Feb |
Conservation
Real Estate 2: Easements and Tax Breaks |
6 |
28-Feb |
Stewardship
and Land management |
FT |
3-Mar |
2nd
Saturday Field Trip to Local Preserve with
Land Trust Staff |
7 |
6-Mar |
Monitoring
and Evaluation of conservation Success |
8 |
7-Mar |
Group
projects, synthesis |
Listing of Potential Readings for each
class session:
1. Introduction to Land Trusts
Brewer, Richard. 2003. Conservancy: The land
trust movement in America. University Press
of New England.
Benedict, Mark, and Ed McMahon. 2006. Green
Infrastructure: Linking landscapes and
communities. Island Press.
Land Trust Alliance. 2004. Land Trust
Standards and Practices.
2. Working with private landowners
Small, Stephen J. 1997-2002. Preserving Family
Lands Vol. 1-3. Land Trust Alliance.
Goldstein, J. H., G. C. Daily, J. B. Friday,
P. A. Matson, and R. A. Naylor. 2006. Business
strategies for conservation on private lands:
Koa forestry as a case study. Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences of the United
States of America 103:10140-10145.
Kabii, T., and P. Horwitz. 2006. A review of
landholder motivations and determinants for participation
in conservation covenanting programmes. Environmental
Conservation 33:11-20.
Langpap, C. 2006. Conservation of endangered
species: Can incentives work for private landowners?
Ecological Economics 57:558-572.
Kindscher, K., and N. Scott. 1997. Land ownership
and tenure of the largest land parcels in the
Flint Hills of Kansas, USA. Natural Areas Journal 17:131-135.
Michael, J. A. 2003. Efficient habitat protection
with diverse landowners and fragmented landscapes.
Environmental Science & Policy 6:243-251.
Polasky, S., H. Doremus, and B. Rettig. 1997.
Endangered species conservation on private land.
Contemporary Economic Policy 15:66-76.
Raedeke, A. H., C. H. Nilon, and J. S. Rikoon.
2001. Factors affecting landowner participation
in ecosystem management: a case study in south-central
Missouri. Wildlife Society Bulletin 29:195-206.
Raymond, L. 2006. Cooperation without trust:
Overcoming collective action barriers to endangered
species protection. Policy Studies Journal 34:37-57.
Shafer, C. L. 2004. A geography of hope: pursuing
the voluntary preservation of America's natural
heritage. Landscape and Urban Planning 66:127-171.
3. Fundraising: Donors, grants, and
bonds
Ginn, William. 2005. Investing in Nature.
Island Press - covers new techniques for financing
land conservation
Hooper, Kim, and Ernst Cook. 2004. The Conservation
Finance Handbook. Trust for Public Land.
McQueen, Mike, and Ed McMahon. 2003. Land Conservation
Financing. Island Press.
4. Conservation Real Estate 1:Appraisals
and Fee Simple Transactions
Land Trust Alliance and the Trust for Public
Land. 1995. Doing Deals: A guide to buying
land for conservation.
Newburn, D., S. Reed, P. Berck, and A. Merenlender.
2005. Economics and land-use change in prioritizing
private land conservation. Conservation Biology 19:1411-1420.
Parker, D. P. 2004. Land trusts and the choice
to conserve land with full ownership or conservation
easements. Natural Resources Journal 44:483-518.
Messer, K. D. 2006. The conservation benefits
of cost-effective land acquisition: A case study
in Maryland. Journal of Environmental Management 79:305-315.
Prendergast, J. R., R. M. Quinn, and J. H. Lawton.
1999. The gaps between theory and practice in
selecting nature reserves. Conservation Biology 13:484-492.
5. Conservation Real Estate 2: Easements
and Tax Breaks
Land Trust Alliance. 2005. The Conservation Easement
Handbook. Includes sample easements
on CD.
Anderson, C. M., and J. R. King. 2004. Equilibrium
behavior in the conservation easement game. Land
Economics 80:355-374.
Crehan, C. L., D. H. Newman, W. A. Flick, and
H. Neuhauserz. 2005. Land trust activity and
highest and best uses under conservation easements
in Georgia, USA. Natural Areas Journal 25:91-100.
Mahoney, J. D. 2004. The illusion of perpetuity
and the preservation of privately owned lands.
Natural Resources Journal 44:573-600.
McLaughlin, N. A. 2005. Rethinking the perpetual
nature of conservation easements. Harvard Environmental
Law Review 29:421-521.
Merenlender, A. M., L. Huntsinger, G. Guthey,
and S. K. Fairfax. 2004. Land trusts and conservation
easements: Who is conserving what for whom? Conservation
Biology 18:65-75.
Morrisette, P. M. 2001. Conservation easements
and the public good: Preserving the environment
on private lands. Natural Resources Journal 41:373-426.
Wright, J. B. 1994. Designing and Applying Conservation
Easements. Journal of the American Planning Association 60:380-388.
Yuan-Farrell, C., M. Marvier, D. Press, and P.
Kareiva. 2005. Conservation easements as a conservation
strategy: Is there a sense to the spatial distribution
of easements? Natural Areas Journal 25:282-289.
6. Stewardship and Land management
Blumstein, D. T., E. Fernandez-Juricic, P. A.
Zollner, and S. C. Garity. 2005. Inter-specific
variation in avian responses to human disturbance.
Journal of Applied Ecology 42:943-953.
Brawn, J. D. 2006. Effects of restoring oak savannas
on bird communities and populations. Conservation
Biology 20:460-469.
Govender, N., W. S. W. Trollope, and B. W. Van
Wilgen. 2006. The effect of fire season, fire
frequency, rainfall and management on fire intensity
in savanna vegetation in South Africa. Journal
of Applied Ecology 43:748-758.
Hulme, P. E. 2006. Beyond control: wider implications
for the management of biological invasions. Journal
of Applied Ecology 43:835-847.
Noss, R. F., P. Beier, W. W. Covington, R. E.
Grumbine, D. B. Lindenmayer, J. W. Prather, F.
Schmiegelow, T. D. Sisk, and D. J. Vosick. 2006.
Recommendations for integrating restoration ecology
and conservation biology in ponderosa pine forests
of the southwestern United States. Restoration
Ecology 14:4-10.
Seabloom, E. W., J. W. Williams, D. Slayback,
D. M. Stoms, J. H. Viers, and A. P. Dobson. 2006.
Human impacts, plant invasion, and imperiled
plant species in California. Ecological Applications 16:1338-1350.
Varner, J. M., D. R. Gordon, E. Putz, and J.
K. Hiers. 2005. Restoring fire to long-unburned
Pinus palustris ecosystems: Novel fire effects
and consequences for long-unburned ecosystems.
Restoration Ecology 13:536-544.
7. Monitoring and Evaluation of conservation
Success
Lind, Brenda. 1991. Conservation Easement Stewardship
Guide. Land Trust Alliance.
Cullen, R., E. Moran, and K. F. D. Hughey. 2005.
Measuring the success and cost effectiveness
of New Zealand multiple-species projects to the
conservation of threatened species. Ecological
Economics 53:311-323.
Noss, R. F. 1990. Indicators for Monitoring Biodiversity
- a Hierarchical Approach. Conservation Biology 4:355-364.
Salafsky, N., R. Margoluis, K. H. Redford, and
J. G. Robinson. 2002. Improving the practice
of conservation: a conceptual framework and research
agenda for conservation science. Conservation
Biology 16:1469-1479.
Salzer, D., and N. Salafsky. 2006. Allocating
resources between taking action, assessing status,
and measuring effectiveness of conservation actions.
Natural Areas Journal 26:310-316.
Stem, C., R. Margoluis, N. Salafsky, and M. Brown.
2005. Monitoring and evaluation in conservation:
a review of trends and approaches. Conservation
Biology 19:295-309.
8. Group projects, synthesis
none |