Range plans definition
Range plans refers to a document that demonstrates how the habitat condition within a given range will be managed over time and space to ensure that critical habitat for Boreal Caribou is protected from destruction and therein, that each local population will either continue to be self- sustaining or become self-sustaining over time.
Range plans refer to plans that provide specific information on historical monitoring and science information on a specific caribou herd or group of herds, as well as actions required to recover caribou herds within a particular geographic planning area, including how range- specific land and/or resource activities will be managed over space and time to protect and recover critical habitat as identified in the federal Recovery Strategy;
Range plans means plans, consistent with ECCC’s Range Plan Guidance for Woodland Caribou, Boreal Population (2016), that provide monitoring and science information on a woodland caribou local population or group of local populations, as well as actions required to conserve and recover that woodland caribou local population or populations. A range plan must include how woodland caribou local population range- specific land and resource management activities will occur over space and time to protect and recover woodland caribou critical habitat. This includes managing for important areas for woodland caribou, biophysical habitat, and establishing an ongoing minimum of 65% of the range as undisturbed habitat. Range plans may be stand-alone documents, or part of other planning documents. Range plans could inform and be informed by broader land-use planning decision making, such as subregional planning.
Examples of Range plans in a sentence
The contractor shall conduct planning tasks which include/support the development of the Range plans.