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Black-tailed Prairie Dog Habitat Suitability Modeling for the Southern Great Plains: Cross-scale Analysis of Soils, Topography and Climate

Dates

End Date
2012-11-16
Start Date
2011-08-08
Start Date
2011-08-08 05:00:00
End Date
2012-11-16 06:00:00

Citation

David J. Augustine(Principal Investigator), William (Bill) E. Armstrong(Cooperator/Partner), Jack F. Cully, Jr.(Cooperator/Partner), Michael F. Antolin(Cooperator/Partner), Great Plains Landscape Conservation Cooperative(publisher), 2012-11-16(End), 2011-08-08(Start), Black-tailed Prairie Dog Habitat Suitability Modeling for the Southern Great Plains: Cross-scale Analysis of Soils, Topography and Climate

Summary

We developed multi-scale habitat suitability models for black-tailed prairie dogs (BTPD) in the southwestern Great Plains, corresponding to the western region of the Great Plains LCC. We used long-term (10-yr), high-resolution datasets on BTPD colony boundary locations collected at 7 study areas distributed across the region to develop resource selection functions based on colony locations and expansion patterns. Models are based on (1) soil maps and associated Ecological Sites (NRCS SSURGO database), (2) a topographic wetness index based upon water runoff and solar insolation patterns (TWIsi) that tests a priori hypotheses for topographic controls on BTPD, and (3) broad climatic gradients in temperature and mean annual precipitation. [...]

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md_metadata.json 209.82 KB application/json

Purpose

Because black-tailed prairie dogs (BTPD) function as ecosystem engineers and keystone species in Great Plains grasslands, their conservation and management lies at the core of many conservation efforts in the region. BTPD management is challenging and controversial because they may compete with livestock and are severely affected by epizootic plague outbreaks caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis. Furthermore, large BTPD colony complexes are needed to achieve conservation goals for multiple associated species including black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigripes), mountain plovers (Charadrius montanus) and burrowing owls. Management such as dusting with insecticides to control plague transmission, poisoning to control prairie dog populations, and translocations to establish new populations are expensive, emphasizing the need to ensure they are applied in a spatially optimized manner to provide multiple ecosystem goods and services.

Project Extension

projectProducts
productDescriptionModels based on (1) soil maps and associated Ecological Sites (NRCS SSURGO database) now available in GIS format for all study sites, (2) newly-developed indices that test a priori hypotheses for topographic controls on BTPD, and (3) broad climatic gradients (temperature and precipitation) measured at seasonal, annual, and multi-annual temporal scales.
statusDelivered
projectStatusCompleted

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2011
fundingSources
amount97102.0
recipientU.S. Department of Agriculture - Agricultural Research Service
sourceU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
amount18096.0
recipientU.S. Department of Agriculture - Agricultural Research Service
sourceU.S. Department of Agriculture - Agricultural Research Service
matchingtrue
amount6750.0
recipientU.S. Department of Agriculture - Agricultural Research Service
sourceU.S. Geological Survey
matchingtrue
amount2430.0
recipientU.S. Department of Agriculture - Agricultural Research Service
sourceColorado State University
matchingtrue
totalFunds124378.0
totalFunds124378.0

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ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • Great Plains Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  • LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal

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File Identifier file identifier 50c7b686e4b0ebb3997467bb

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