North Atlantic LCC Wildlife Action Plan
Assistance:
Mapping Species and Habitats across State Boundaries
Steve Fuller & Lori Pelech
Conservation Design Specialist
North Atlantic LCC
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
1
Objective NE Conservation Synthesis for State
Wildlife Actions Plans
• To synthesize regional conservation information
into a consistent format that states can easily
access and incorporate into their Wildlife
Actions Plan revisions
• To this information easily accessible to states
and conservation partners.
2
3
How does NALCC help the Northeast States with their Wildlife
Action Plans?
•We compiled species data for the “RSGCN”
•We compiled data layers on relative condition of habitats
•We are building a national network of information platforms
•We fund and negotiate data sharing agreements
•We resolve data compatibility issues across state lines
•We are not here to make decisions about Wildlife action Plans or SGCN
data, but we can provide assistance
•We can “crunch” big datasets to help analyze the distribution, abundance
and condition of populations, species, and habitats
•We agree to put sensitive results back in State protection
•We aim to help satisfy the 8 Elements of Wildlife Action Plans
4
Why is a regional context important ?
5
Missing Data?
The image shown is
for demonstration
only and does not
represent actual data
6
Uneven effort?
The image shown is
for demonstration
only and does not
represent actual data
7
OMG
A nice data set?
The image shown is
for demonstration
only and does not
represent actual data
8
Rarity?
Severe
decline?
The image shown is
for demonstration
only and does not
represent actual data
9
The image shown is
for demonstration
only and does not
represent actual data
10
What is the role of LCCs in Wildlife Action Plans?
We want to create baseline landscape conservation
science for voluntary use in Wildlife Action Plans:
•Data layers summarizing environmental conditions
that describe the status of species and habitats
•Data layers summarized at multiple scales to
describe the collective status of species and habitats
within important geographies or jurisdictions
11
WE HAVE
ASSEMBLED THE
DATA TO DO ALL
THESE THINGS.
12
13
ScienceComplexity
Time to Adoption
Limited adoption!
Useful
Science
We think about science utility and adoptability every day.
14
What is the role of LCCs in Wildlife Action Plans?
•After 10 months negotiating agreements, acquiring data, and cleaning it up…
•one week we summarized the security, fragmentation, connectivity, and many other
factors for over 300,000 records of top priority Northeast RSGCNs
•Building a multi-state Conservation GIS involves a lot of “grunt” work…
•It is the only way to see the big picture!!
•We are here to provide capacity to assemble consistent data across boundaries and
provide useful analyses to our partners
•We need states Wildlife Action Planners to
decide what to do with landscape analysis results!
Getting data is the hard part.
NE Terrestrial Habitat Map
A consistent classification and map across 13 states
Above Zoom-in:
Pitch Pine Barren
Acidic Swamp
Rocky Oak Woodland
Pine-Oak Forest
App Hemlock-N Hardwood Forest
Size
Gradient
TemperatureGeology
Possible Metrics for each
Terrestrial and Wetland Type
Biotic and Geophysical Indicators
•Richness of rare species
•TNC Portfolio
•SWAP Portfolio
Ecological Setting
• Size of patch and core Area
• Size of Block
• Number of landforms / Ecological land units
• Connectedness of patch
• Distance /Adjacencies to other patches
Human Modification
• Type and number of bounding and internal roads.
• Fragmentation index
• Housing Density Pressure
• Landscape context / Isolation index
• Degree of Cutting (FIA – types only)
• Age/Size class statistics (FIA – types only)
• Risk of Pollution (acid ep, ozone)
Securement
•% of Secured Land by GAP Status
•% of Secured Land by Ownership Classes
•Secured Land by % Interest Types
Completeness Bar as of 4/5/2013:
0% 100%
0% 100%
0% 100%
0% 100%
0% 100%0% 100% 0% 100%
Habitat
Maps
%
Conserved
Securement
Habitat
Names
Habitat Descriptions
State Crosswalks
Places to Visit
0% 100%
Associated
Wildlife
Habitat Guide
Page 1
• Map
• Description (NS)
• Similar Habitats
• Ecological Setting
• Securement
• Wildlife
– Birds
– Herptiles
– Mammals
– (From Literature)
20
this is a rat
this is a snake
What do
landscape data
tell us about
species?
21
this is a rat
this is a snake
22
this is a rat
this is a snake
23
this is a rat
this is a snake
this is a dead rat
24
NE Regional SGCN 538 Species
A dataset of 300,000 species “presences” across 13 states
What are the applications
of a multi-state habitat
classification and a species
presence dataset?
Data-driven best-
available science!!
Raw Data Points:
NatureServe
State Data
Bird Atlases
eBird
Researchers
Species data
hotspots
QUANTIFY the relative condition of populations, patches….
Then prioritize across species, habitats, and landscapes
…more efficient than QUALITATIVE rankings!!!
Connectivity
∑ …of factors ABCD for each point or “patch”
= index of relative condition of a population or
patch of habitatResiliency
Integrity
•RSGCN
•T&E
•Surrogate species
Vulnerability
Security
Development
Habitat Class
26
Landscape conditions
summarized for each point…
•Relative condition of
populations
•Relative condition of habitat
patches
Landscape condition
summarized across points…
•Prioritize Species
•Prioritize Habitats
•Prioritize Locations
•Prioritize Actions
27
What is the role of LCCs in Wildlife Action Plans?
SWAP CHAPTER
TEMPLATE
Prioritizing
Actions
28
•Reports and data will be packaged so that they can be used voluntarily in
SWAP revisions
•Each state will choose how to use our results in collaboration with their
partners
•Reports and data will be made accessible via the NALCC web portal
•Regional tools will allow states to plan locally for species needs in the context
of their regional distributions
•The regional context may help prioritize decisions about which things NOT to
work on.
29
•Emphasis on State-Federal collaboration in the
Northeast Conservation Framework
•We know we NEED to collaborate managing BIG
datasets is a challenge
•We schedule joint meetings & fund complementary
projects to States
•NEAFWA Directors asked us to help with information
management and synthesize landscape analysis
•We created capacity in FWS, WMI and TNC to help states
How do States and NALCC stay connected?

Fuller 2013 North Atlantic LCC Wildlife Action Plan Assistance

  • 1.
    North Atlantic LCCWildlife Action Plan Assistance: Mapping Species and Habitats across State Boundaries Steve Fuller & Lori Pelech Conservation Design Specialist North Atlantic LCC U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1
  • 2.
    Objective NE ConservationSynthesis for State Wildlife Actions Plans • To synthesize regional conservation information into a consistent format that states can easily access and incorporate into their Wildlife Actions Plan revisions • To this information easily accessible to states and conservation partners. 2
  • 3.
    3 How does NALCChelp the Northeast States with their Wildlife Action Plans? •We compiled species data for the “RSGCN” •We compiled data layers on relative condition of habitats •We are building a national network of information platforms •We fund and negotiate data sharing agreements •We resolve data compatibility issues across state lines •We are not here to make decisions about Wildlife action Plans or SGCN data, but we can provide assistance •We can “crunch” big datasets to help analyze the distribution, abundance and condition of populations, species, and habitats •We agree to put sensitive results back in State protection •We aim to help satisfy the 8 Elements of Wildlife Action Plans
  • 4.
    4 Why is aregional context important ?
  • 5.
    5 Missing Data? The imageshown is for demonstration only and does not represent actual data
  • 6.
    6 Uneven effort? The imageshown is for demonstration only and does not represent actual data
  • 7.
    7 OMG A nice dataset? The image shown is for demonstration only and does not represent actual data
  • 8.
    8 Rarity? Severe decline? The image shownis for demonstration only and does not represent actual data
  • 9.
    9 The image shownis for demonstration only and does not represent actual data
  • 10.
    10 What is therole of LCCs in Wildlife Action Plans? We want to create baseline landscape conservation science for voluntary use in Wildlife Action Plans: •Data layers summarizing environmental conditions that describe the status of species and habitats •Data layers summarized at multiple scales to describe the collective status of species and habitats within important geographies or jurisdictions
  • 11.
    11 WE HAVE ASSEMBLED THE DATATO DO ALL THESE THINGS.
  • 12.
  • 13.
    13 ScienceComplexity Time to Adoption Limitedadoption! Useful Science We think about science utility and adoptability every day.
  • 14.
    14 What is therole of LCCs in Wildlife Action Plans? •After 10 months negotiating agreements, acquiring data, and cleaning it up… •one week we summarized the security, fragmentation, connectivity, and many other factors for over 300,000 records of top priority Northeast RSGCNs •Building a multi-state Conservation GIS involves a lot of “grunt” work… •It is the only way to see the big picture!! •We are here to provide capacity to assemble consistent data across boundaries and provide useful analyses to our partners •We need states Wildlife Action Planners to decide what to do with landscape analysis results! Getting data is the hard part.
  • 15.
    NE Terrestrial HabitatMap A consistent classification and map across 13 states Above Zoom-in: Pitch Pine Barren Acidic Swamp Rocky Oak Woodland Pine-Oak Forest App Hemlock-N Hardwood Forest
  • 16.
  • 17.
    Possible Metrics foreach Terrestrial and Wetland Type Biotic and Geophysical Indicators •Richness of rare species •TNC Portfolio •SWAP Portfolio Ecological Setting • Size of patch and core Area • Size of Block • Number of landforms / Ecological land units • Connectedness of patch • Distance /Adjacencies to other patches Human Modification • Type and number of bounding and internal roads. • Fragmentation index • Housing Density Pressure • Landscape context / Isolation index • Degree of Cutting (FIA – types only) • Age/Size class statistics (FIA – types only) • Risk of Pollution (acid ep, ozone) Securement •% of Secured Land by GAP Status •% of Secured Land by Ownership Classes •Secured Land by % Interest Types
  • 18.
    Completeness Bar asof 4/5/2013: 0% 100% 0% 100% 0% 100% 0% 100% 0% 100%0% 100% 0% 100% Habitat Maps % Conserved Securement Habitat Names Habitat Descriptions State Crosswalks Places to Visit 0% 100% Associated Wildlife
  • 19.
    Habitat Guide Page 1 •Map • Description (NS) • Similar Habitats • Ecological Setting • Securement • Wildlife – Birds – Herptiles – Mammals – (From Literature)
  • 20.
    20 this is arat this is a snake What do landscape data tell us about species?
  • 21.
    21 this is arat this is a snake
  • 22.
    22 this is arat this is a snake
  • 23.
    23 this is arat this is a snake this is a dead rat
  • 24.
    24 NE Regional SGCN538 Species A dataset of 300,000 species “presences” across 13 states What are the applications of a multi-state habitat classification and a species presence dataset? Data-driven best- available science!! Raw Data Points: NatureServe State Data Bird Atlases eBird Researchers Species data hotspots QUANTIFY the relative condition of populations, patches…. Then prioritize across species, habitats, and landscapes …more efficient than QUALITATIVE rankings!!!
  • 25.
    Connectivity ∑ …of factorsABCD for each point or “patch” = index of relative condition of a population or patch of habitatResiliency Integrity •RSGCN •T&E •Surrogate species Vulnerability Security Development Habitat Class
  • 26.
    26 Landscape conditions summarized foreach point… •Relative condition of populations •Relative condition of habitat patches Landscape condition summarized across points… •Prioritize Species •Prioritize Habitats •Prioritize Locations •Prioritize Actions
  • 27.
    27 What is therole of LCCs in Wildlife Action Plans? SWAP CHAPTER TEMPLATE Prioritizing Actions
  • 28.
    28 •Reports and datawill be packaged so that they can be used voluntarily in SWAP revisions •Each state will choose how to use our results in collaboration with their partners •Reports and data will be made accessible via the NALCC web portal •Regional tools will allow states to plan locally for species needs in the context of their regional distributions •The regional context may help prioritize decisions about which things NOT to work on.
  • 29.
    29 •Emphasis on State-Federalcollaboration in the Northeast Conservation Framework •We know we NEED to collaborate managing BIG datasets is a challenge •We schedule joint meetings & fund complementary projects to States •NEAFWA Directors asked us to help with information management and synthesize landscape analysis •We created capacity in FWS, WMI and TNC to help states How do States and NALCC stay connected?