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Patterns and Processes of Dispersal of Black-Tailed Prairie Dogs in a Heavily Managed Landscape of the Great Plains Landscape Conservation Cooperative

Dates

Start Date
2011-08-22
End Date
2012-09-30
Start Date
2011-08-22 05:00:00
End Date
2012-09-30 05:00:00

Citation

Samantha M. Wisely(Principal Investigator), Jack F. Cully, Jr.(Cooperator/Partner), Charles (Charlie) Lee(Cooperator/Partner), Great Plains Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), 2011-08-22(Start), 2012-09-30(End), Patterns and Processes of Dispersal of Black-Tailed Prairie Dogs in a Heavily Managed Landscape of the Great Plains Landscape Conservation Cooperative

Summary

The black‐tailed prairie dog (Cynomys ludovicianus) is considered an indicator species for the short grass prairie of North America; however, this species currently occupies an estimated 2% of its original distribution. Persistent and pervasive poisoning, and sylvatic plague have fragmented the remaining populations. It is not well understood how these population fragments are connected in a heterogeneous landscape of land use practices and land cover types, but quantifying population isolation and individual measures of dispersal across the landscape are essential to predicting both the vulnerability of extinction due to stochastic processes and the probability of disease emergence. To better understand how land use practices and [...]

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Purpose

We developed and tested quantitative BTPD habitat suitability models for the southwestern Great Plains that examined the influence of climate, soils, and topography. We evaluated soils in two ways. First, we examined resource selection functions (RSFs) based upon quantitative measures of soil texture, organic matter content, pH and depth to a restricted layer. Second, we examined RSFs that aggregated these soil attributes at the level of Ecological Sites recently developed by the Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS). We controlled for the influence of land use by focusing on National Grasslands consistently managed with moderate cattle stocking rates, and thereby independently evaluated the influence of climate, soil and topography on BTPD habitat. Thus, our models do not incorporate the influence of land use, but will be essential for future incorporation of land use effects into modeling and conservation planning efforts.

Project Extension

projectProducts
productDescriptionReport
statusDelivered
projectStatusCompleted

Budget Extension

annualBudgets
year2011
fundingSources
amount89760.0
recipientKansas State University
sourceU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
totalFunds89760.0
totalFunds89760.0

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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 52e2e120e4b0f6f2a85f4b07

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