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Foreword
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: Why Study Climate Change in Mountains?- PART I: Approaches for Climate Adaptation Planning
2. Linking Climate Science and Management
3. Challenges and Approaches for Integrating Climate Science into Federal Land Management
PART II: Climate and Land Use Change
4. Historical and Projected Climates to Support Climate Adaptation across the Northern Rocky Mountains
5. Foundational Analyses of Historical and Projected Climates as a Basis for Climate Change Exposure and Adaptation Potential across the Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative
6. Assessing Vulnerability to Land Use and Climate Change at Landscape Scales: Landforms and Physiographic Diversity as Coarse-Filter Targets Representing Species and Processes
PART III: Ecological Consequences and Vulnerabilities
7. Quantifying Impacts of Climate Change on Ecosystem Processes in the Great Northern and Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperatives
8. Modeling Potential Impacts of Climate Change on Vegetation for National Parks in the Eastern United States
9. Potential Impacts of Climate Change on Tree Species and Biome Types in the United States Northern Rocky Mountains
10. Past, Present, and Future Climate Shapes the Vegetation Communities of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem across Elevation Gradients
11. Assessing the Vulnerability of Tree Species to Climate Change in the Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative
12. Likely Responses of Native and Invasive Salmonid Fishes to Climate Change in the Rocky and Appalachian Mountains
PART IV. Managing under Climate Change
13. Opportunities, Challenges, Approaches to Achieving Climate-Smart Adaptation
14. Perspectives on Responding to Climate Change at Rocky Mountain National Park
15. Case Study: Whitebark Pine in Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
16. Assessing Success in Sustaining Wildland Ecosystems: Insights from Greater Yellowstone
17. Conclusion
Contributors
Index.

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