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Science and Innovations

Flagstaff Nonprofit Releases Climate Adaption Plan for Grand Canyon Region

Grand Canyon Trust

A Grand Canyon conservation group has released the first ever climate change plan for the region. It prioritizes concerns such increasing risk of drought and wildfire.

The plan, written by the Grand Canyon Trust, covers more than 800,000 acres on the canyon’s North Rim. The nonprofit group holds cattle grazing permits there.

The group’s North Rim Ranches overseer, Ed Grumbine, says the Trust wanted to prepare a management plan that addresses climate change.

“Since the Southwest is right in the climate crosshairs as a hotspot of projected change and current change,” he says, “we realized that if we wanted to continue our operation and continue our conservation and ranching goals into the future, then we had to deal with climate.”  

The plan assesses vulnerabilities and makes recommendations for dealing with the risk of forest fire, reduced water supplies, and changes in vegetation.  Ariel Leonard, forest planner and climate change coordinator for the Kaibab National Forest, says it’s valuable to have site-specific plans. 

“Just having a starting point where we can say, we all agree about these themes, then we can take the conversation the next step further to say, and how does that translate into specific management actions?” Leonard says.

The first stage of the plan will be an inventory of water sources on the North Rim critical for wildlife and livestock.

Melissa joined KNAU's team in 2015 to report on science, health, and the environment. Her work has appeared nationally on NPR and been featured on Science Friday. She grew up in Tucson, Arizona, where she fell in love with the ecology and geology of the Sonoran desert.
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