Wildlife damage management in the digital age: collaborating with others

Three seemingly disparate Communities of Practice (CoPs)—Urban Integrated Pest Management (Urban IPM), Wildlife Damage Management (WDM), and Imported Fire Ants—came together to promote IPM and WDM by sharing information on websites and through webinars. Originally, each CoP on the eXtension web site...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human-wildlife interactions 2015-10, Vol.9 (2), p.163-165
Hauptverfasser: Graham, L. C. (“Fudd”), Hurley, Janet, Flanders, Kathy
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Three seemingly disparate Communities of Practice (CoPs)—Urban Integrated Pest Management (Urban IPM), Wildlife Damage Management (WDM), and Imported Fire Ants—came together to promote IPM and WDM by sharing information on websites and through webinars. Originally, each CoP on the eXtension web site was set up to be a unique information source. It became clear very early in eXtension’s development that many of these unique, single-topic sites had information that could be used by others. These 3 CoPs had the foresight to work together and link information, rather than creating new material.
ISSN:2155-3858
2155-3874