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Gunnison sage-grouse habitat suitability surface for Poncha Pass satellite population (summer, landscape): U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service critical habitat extent (southwestern Colorado)

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
1991
End Date
2016

Citation

Saher, J., O'Donnell, M.S., Aldridge, C.L., and Heinrichs, J.A., 2021, Gunnison sage-grouse habitat suitability of six satellite populations in southwestern Colorado: San Miguel, Crawford, Piñon Mesa, Dove Creek, Cerro Summit-Cimarron-Sims, and Poncha Pass: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P93WFW13.

Summary

The Gunnison sage-grouse (Centrocercus minimus) habitat suitability surface for Poncha Pass satellite population represented here reflects summer season at a landscape scale context (window extents [radius] of 1 km, 3 km, and 6.4 km). Habitat suitability estimated for U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service critical habitat extent (southwestern Colorado). We developed habitat selection models for Gunnison sage-grouse (Centrocercus minimus), a threatened species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. We followed a management-centric modeling approach that sought to balance the need to evaluate the consistency of key habitat conditions and improvement actions across multiple, distinct populations, while allowing context-specific environmental [...]

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gusg_ponchapass_summer_landscape_usfws_hsi.tif 947.6 KB image/geotiff

Purpose

Identifying, protecting, and restoring habitats for declining wildlife populations is foundational to conservation and recovery planning for any species at risk of decline. Resource selection analysis is a key tool to assess habitat and prescribe management actions. Conservation, species recovery, and habitat management efforts are needed in six isolated satellite populations (San Miguel, Crawford, Piñon Mesa, Dove Creek, Cerro Summit-Cimarron-Sims, and Poncha Pass), where environmental conditions differ, and the already small number of birds is declining. Resource selection analyses contribute to our understanding of species management by identifying key factors influencing selection (e.g., strength of covariates) and predicted habitat suitability. Our Gunnison sage-grouse case study points to specific opportunities for habitat restoration or improvement that may otherwise be missed with conventional habitat suitability modeling approaches. The inclusion of hierarchical seasonal habitat selection, varying ecological contexts, and a range of scales of influence yielded general insights regarding the reliability of crucial management variables and associated actions, as well as context-specific considerations that could be vital to achieving meaningful habitat improvements. These habitat suitability maps (raster surfaces) are intended to help wildlife and land managers gauge how Gunnison sage-grouse currently use habitat within each population and how changes to existing habitat conditions through restoration might improve habitat most effectively.

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