APA Research, Science and Planning Policy
With its mix of public and private lands, the Adirondack Park provides a rich landscape for the research of natural and cultural resources. Throughout its more than a quarter-century of operation, the Adirondack Park Agency (APA) has built scientific, geographic, and planning databases to be able to serve the public more effectively and efficiently, to aid the decision-making process for other State agencies, local governments, organizations and landowners in the Park, and to encourage more research involvement within the Park by universities.
Fast Facts
EPA Wetland & Watershed Reports
Area Statistics by county
for the park from the Adirondack Park Land Use and Development Plan
and State Land Map
Adirondack Park Land Use and Development Plan Map and State Land Map - this interactive map also includes park wetlands and designated river system areas.
Additional links:
About the Park: Geology, Natural
Communities, Adirondack Wildlife, Adirondack History
About APA’s Resource Analysis
and Scientific Services Unit
Citizen's
Guide
Adirondack
Park Agency Act
Rules
and Regulations
Adirondack
Park State Land Master Plan
Trends
Analysis Plan
Preliminary List of Species Native Within the Adirondack Park
listed alphabetically by Common
Name or listed alphabetically by Scientific Name
Inter-Agency Work Plan for
Management of Terrestrial Invasive Plant Species on State Land in
the Adirondack Park
Charts of Forest Pests of the Adirondacks
Slideshow Database of Charismatic Megawetlands in the Adirondack Park
Become a Citizen Scientist Volunteer
Would you like to become a Citizen Scientist volunteer and Help Monitor the Effects of Climate Change on Adirondack Wetlands?
Visit the SUNY ESF Interpretive Center's Website to find out more.
Find More Information...
Finch-Pruyn Biological Survey, Summary of Results - Please note: This report was written by Jerry Jenkins in 2001 following a year of field work. Finch, Pruyn & Co., who owned the lands at the time, contracted with The Nature Conservancy to conduct a biological survey as part of the company’s sustainable forestry certification process. The survey included more land than has since been purchased outright or protected by conservation easement by New York State. Tract names and boundaries in the report do not always align with parcels conveyed by The Nature Conservancy to New York State between 2012 and 2016.
Learn more about GIS at the APA
Visit the Adirondack Park Invasives Plant Program website.
Adirondack Research Consortium research
links
"Anothura troglodytes [Troglodytes troglodytes - Winter Wren]-No.
585, August 11, 1875. Rather common in the dense woods, but rarely
seen ... it is often heard; however, for it possesses a gushing,
ringing song, wonderfully loud for so small a creature; excepting
the thrushes it is the sweetest songster in the Adirondac woods
..."
-- Teddy Roosevelt, age 16, from his pamphlet The Summer
Birds of the Adirondacks in Franklin County, N.Y.