999 resultados para Kishwaukee River, Illinois.
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"1994 1995" on cover.
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Prepared for the Cache River Joint Venture Partnership (JVP): Illinois Department of Natural Resources, The Nature Conservancy, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Ducks Unlimited, Natural Resources Conservation Service.
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Lithographed; printed by the Peoria photopress.
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Includes bibliographies.
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"Critical Trends Assessment Program."--Cover.
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Vols. 1 and 3 published 2000; v. 2 and 4: 1999.
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"The La Moine River Area Assessment, part of a series of statewide regional assessments, examines approximately 1,855 square miles in west-central Illinois. The report provides information on the natural and human resources of the area as a basis for managing and improving its ecosystem. The development of ecosystem-based information and management programs in Illinois are the result of three processes -- the Critical Trends Assessment Program, Conservation Congress, and Water Resources and Land Use Priorities Task Force."--P. iii, v. 2. Information and management programs in Illinois are the result of three processes -- the Critical Trends Assessment Program, the Conservation Congress, and the Water Resources and Land Use Priorities Task Force."--P. iii, v. 2.
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Bibliography: p. 57-59.
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Examines an area of 357.5 miles in northeast Illinois--much of which is a part of the Greater Chicago Metropolitan Region. The area includes eight subbasins, of which two have been designated a state Resource Rich Area.
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"Examines an area in northwestern Illinois formed by the Rock and Green River systems ... designated a state Resource Rich Area"--P. iii.
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"The Lower Sangamon River Area Assessment examines 5,419 square miles in central Illinois."--P. iii.
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Cover title.
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"March 2003."
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"A project of the Critical Trends Assessment Program."
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"The Mackinaw River Area Assessment examines an area situated along the Mackinaw River in the central part of Illinois. Because significant natural community and species diversity is found in the area, it has been designated a state Resource Rich Area. This report is part of a series of reports on Illinois Resource Rich Areas where a public-private partnership has been formed. These assessments provide information on the natural and human resources of the areas as a basis for managing and improving their ecosystems. The determination of resource rich areas and development of ecosystem-based information and management programs in Illinois are the result of three processes -- the Critical Trends Assessment Program, the Conservation Congress, and the Water Resources and Land Use Priorities Task Force."--P. iii, v.1.