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Determining species occurrence in ecosystems of high conservation concern is especially important for recommending habitat management techniques and identifying suitable restoration sites. We investigated (1) how stand- and landscape-scale attributes affect occupancy of priority bird species associated with longleaf pine (Pinus palutris) ecosystems, (2) if these priority birds can be used as indicator species for desired open pine forest structure, and (3) if these indicator species are positively correlated with greater avian richness. We compared priority bird occupancy among 12 stand types (habitat types) throughout the historic range of longleaf pine in Mississippi. We found stands resembling the historic longleaf...
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: LCC Network Science Catalog,
Monitoring,
Population and Habitat Evaluation/Projection,
Publication,
completed
The HRUs available here are for an application of the Precipitation Runoff Modeling System (PRMS) in the southeastern United States by LaFontaine and others (2017). A Geographic Information System (GIS) file for the HRUs is provided as a shapefile with attribute hru_id_1 identifying the numbering convention used in the PRMS model. This GIS file represents the watershed area for an approximately 1.16 million square kilometer area of the southeastern United States.
Categories: Data;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Data,
Data Acquisition and Development,
Data Management and Integration,
LCC Network Science Catalog,
Population and Habitat Evaluation/Projection,
Open canopy conditions in southeastern pine (Pinus spp.) forests were historically maintained by frequent fire and other disturbances, without which midstory hardwoods create closed canopy conditions limiting value of pine stands for many endemic, disturbance-adapted species. Intensively managed pine forests, which comprise 19% of forests in the southeastern U.S., can emulate historical open pine conditions, providing appropriate vegetation structure and composition for many endemic species. However, exact mechanisms for producing and maintaining open pine conditions and subsequent effects on biodiversity have not been examined across regions and stand ages. To better inform managers about options for providing...
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Biodiversity,
Conservation planning,
Forest management,
LCC Network Science Catalog,
Loblolly pine,
Efforts to conserve regional biodiversity in the face of global climate change, habitat loss and fragmentation will depend on approaches that consider population processes at multiple scales. By combining habitat and demographic modeling, landscape-based population viability models effectively relate small-scale habitat and landscape patterns to regional population viability. We demonstrate the power of landscape-based population viability models to inform conservation planning by using these models to evaluate responses of prairie warbler (Dendroica discolor) and wood thrush (Hylocichla mustelina) populations in the Central Hardwoods Bird Conservation Region to simulated conservation scenarios. We assessed the...
Categories: Data,
Publication;
Types: Citation;
Tags: Consevation design,
LCC Network Science Catalog,
Population and Habitat Evaluation/Projection,
Publication,
Vulnerability Assessment,
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