The Stewardship Mapping Project (STEW-MAP): Denver
Across the country, people are planting trees, organizing community gardens, monitoring local ecosystems, and cleaning up nearby parks or natural areas. Those who do this work may not think of what they do as “stewardship”, however, they are indeed stewards of their local environments. Care of shared natural resources in urban areas increasingly relies on the work of environmental stewardship groups and coalitions. At the same time, land managers and other decision makers often do not understand the roles and contributions of civic stewards. Stewards themselves may also not be aware of others doing similar work in their area.

At present, no natural resource agency or organization is collecting or distributing comprehensive civic stewardship data at the local level. The Denver/Front Range Stewardship Mapping and Assessment Project (STEW-MAP) will fill this gap by surveying formal and informal stewardship groups across seven Colorado counties. Based on methodology developed by the USDA Forest Service’s NYC Urban Field Station, the Denver STEW-MAP will paint a picture of the region’s environmental stewardship “landscape”, documenting where the many private, non-profit, and public sector organizations work, how they are connected, and from where they source information and tools. For more information on the benefits of STEW-MAP, see “Why do STEW-MAP?”
The Denver STEW-MAP seeks to answer the question: What are the social and spatial (geographic) interactions among groups that conserve, manage, monitor, advocate for, and educate the public about their local environments? Methods include an organizational-level survey with subsequent maps and social network datasets created from survey responses. In this way, the project adds a social layer of information to biophysical information on green infrastructure (e.g., urban tree canopy, parks and open space, riparian areas) in the metro area that already exists or is being developed. It will also uncover gaps in action, knowledge, and resources, which will inform the continued development of Denver Urban Field Station and influence future applied research projects and priorities.
Background Information and History
The Denver Urban Field Station (DUFS) is a collaborative research and practice unit of the US Forest Service (USFS) Rocky Mountain Research Station exploring the connections between people and nature and the role of vegetation in semi-arid cities, towns, and developing regions of the Intermountain West and Great Plains. Launched in 2016 in partnership with the USFS Rocky Mountain Region, CU Denver, City and County of Denver, and US Geological Survey, DUFS is also exploring and expanding partnerships with the Metro Denver Nature Alliance, The Nature Conservancy, CSU, CU Boulder, USFS Intermountain Region, and others. The Denver Environmental Stewardship Mapping (STEW-MAP) Project is the first DUFS collaborative research project.
Seven counties comprise the Metro Denver Nature Alliance and the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District, which invests in and connects arts and cultural organizations. DRCOG, the regional council of governments includes these same counties as well as Clear Creek, Gilpin, and southwest Weld counties.
Collaborators
Contacts
- Amanda Egan, USDA Forest Service
- Austin Troy, UC Denver
- Dana Coelho, Metro Denver Nature Alliance
- Jay Diffendorfer, US Geological Survey
- Sara Davis, City and Count of Denver
- Colleen Donavan, Social Science Strategies
Partners
- USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station
- USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Region
- USDA Forest Service Intermountain Region
- University of Colorado, Denver
- Program in Environmental Design, CU Boulder
- Warner College of Natural Resources, Colorado State University
- Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute, University of Denver
- City and County of Denver, Office of the City Forester
- US Geological Survey
- Metro Denver Nature Alliance
- The Nature Conservancy
Key Points of Contacts at Institutions
- Susan Daggett, Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute, University of Denver
- Melissa McHale, Colorado State University
- Brian Muller, University of Colorado, Denver
- Chris Hawkins, The Nature Conservancy