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This feature estimates the geographic extent of the sagebrush biome in the United States. It was created for the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agency’s (WAFWA) Sagebrush Conservation Strategy publication as a visual for the schematic figures. This layer does not represent the realized distribution of sagebrush and should not be used to summarize statistics about the distribution or precise location of sagebrush across the landscape. This layer is intended to generalize the sagebrush biome distribution using Landsat derived classified vegetation rasters (Rigge at al. 2019), Bureau of Land Management-designated Habitat Management Areas, state-designated Priority Areas for Conservation for sage-grouse, the...
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The Great Basin LCC is comprised of partner individuals and organizations. These individuals and groups sit on decision making committees such as the GBLCC Steering Committee and S-TEK Committee, conduct research that is financially supported by GBLCC, particpate in Landscape Conservation Design projects, serve as operations and communications staff for the organization and fill other significant organizational roles. These data contained herein describe the geographic distribution of the individuals and organizations locations of work for the purposes of strategic analysis and planning and public display. All past and present contributors to GBLCC strategic planning, operations, and research are included based...
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Predictions of raven occurrence in the absence of natural environmental effects. Raven point counts were related to landscape covariates using Bayesian hierarchical occupancy models and the means of the posterior distributions for relevant effects were used to generate the predictions.
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The Great Basin LCC is comprised of partner individuals and organizations. These individuals and groups sit on decision making committees such as the GBLCC Steering Committee and S-TEK Committee, conduct research that is financially supported by GBLCC, particpate in Landscape Conservation Design projects, serve as operations and communications staff for the organization and fill other significant organizational roles. These data contained herein describe the geographic distribution of the individuals and organizations locations of work for the purposes of strategic analysis and planning and public display. All past and present contributors to GBLCC strategic planning, operations, and research are included based...
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Landscape Conservation Cooperatives (LCCs) are public-private partnerships composed of states, tribes, federal agencies, non-governmental organizations, universities, international jurisdictions, and others working together to address landscape and seascape scale conservation issues. LCCs inform resource management decisions to address broad-scale stressors-including habitat fragmentation, genetic isolation, spread of invasive species, and water scarcity-all of which are magnified by a rapidly changing climate. For further information go to https://www.fws.gov/science/catalog. The previous 2011 LCC Network Areas data is available at https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/52f2735ee4b0a6f0bd498c2f
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Emerging applications of ecosystem resilience and resistance concepts in sagebrush ecosystems allow managers to better predict and mitigate impacts of wildfire and invasive annual grasses. Soil temperature and moisture strongly influence the kind and amount of vegetation, and consequently, are closely tied to sagebrush ecosystem resilience and resistance (Chambers et al. 2014, 2016). Soil taxonomic temperature and moisture regimes can be used as indicators of resilience and resistance at landscape scales to depict environmental gradients in sagebrush ecosystems that range from cold/cool-moist sites to warm-dry sites. We aggregated soil survey spatial and tabular data to facilitate broad-scale analyses of resilience...
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This raster portrays the distribution of sagebrush within the geographic extent of the sagebrush biome in the United States. It was created for the Western Association of Fish and Wildlife Agency’s (WAFWA) Sagebrush Conservation Strategy publication as a visual for the schematic figures and to calculate summary statistics. This distribution incorporates the most recently available sagebrush cover mapping (Xian et al. 2015, Rigge et al. 2019) and classified LANDFIRE EVT (Department of Ecosystem Science, University of Wyoming 2016). Both datasets were rigorously evaluated and extensive ground measurements taken to evaluate accuracy by the respective authors. We created a combined binary sagebrush distribution by classifying...
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Predictions of an anthropogenic influence on raven occurrence index intersected with sage-grouse concentration areas. The anthropogenic influence index indicates where resource subsidies are contributing the most to raven occurrence.
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The Great Basin LCC is comprised of partner individuals and organizations. These individuals and groups sit on decision making committees such as the GBLCC Steering Committee and S-TEK Committee, conduct research that is financially supported by GBLCC, particpate in Landscape Conservation Design projects, serve as operations and communications staff for the organization and fill other significant organizational roles. These data contained herein describe the geographic distribution of the individuals and organizations locations of work for the purposes of strategic analysis and planning and public display. All past and present contributors to GBLCC strategic planning, operations, and research are included based...
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This data is for planning purposes only. LCCs are applied conservation science partnerships with two main functions. The first is to promote collaboration among their members in defining shared conservation goals. With these goals in mind, partners can identify where and how they will take action, within their own authorities and organizational priorities, to best contribute to the larger conservation effort. The second function of LCCs is to provide the science and technical expertise needed to address the shared priorities and support conservation planning at landscape scales – beyond the scope and authority of any one organization. The organizational model of the LCC Network was intentionally structured to operate...
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Raven point counts were related to landscape covariates using Bayesian hierarchical occupancy models and the mean of the predicted posterior distribution for raven occurrence was used to visualize results.
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An index of anthropogenic influences on raven populations. Raven point counts were related to landscape covariates using Bayesian hierarchical occupancy models and the means of the posterior distributions for relevant effects were used to generate the predictions.


    map background search result map search result map Dataset: Index of Relative Ecosystem Resilience and Resistance across Sage-Grouse Management Zones Great Basin LCC Partners Heatmap Great Basin LCC Partners Great Basin LCC Partners Predicted probability of raven occurrence across the Great Basin, USA, 2007 – 2016 (Fig. 3) Predictions of raven occurrence in the absence of natural environmental effects in the Great Basin, 2007-2016 (Fig. 4A) Anthropogenic influence index for raven populations in the Great Basin, 2007-2016 (Fig. 4C) Prediction of raven occurrence intersected with high impact areas for sage-grouse populations in the Great Basin, 2007-2016 (Fig. 5A) Anthropogenic influence on raven occurrence index within sage-grouse concentration areas in the Great Basin, 2007-2016 (Fig. 5B) The Sagebrush Biome Range Extent, as Derived from Classified Landsat Imagery Sagebrush Distribution within the Biome Range Extent, as Derived from Classified Landsat Imagery Prediction of raven occurrence intersected with high impact areas for sage-grouse populations in the Great Basin, 2007-2016 (Fig. 5A) Anthropogenic influence on raven occurrence index within sage-grouse concentration areas in the Great Basin, 2007-2016 (Fig. 5B) Predicted probability of raven occurrence across the Great Basin, USA, 2007 – 2016 (Fig. 3) Predictions of raven occurrence in the absence of natural environmental effects in the Great Basin, 2007-2016 (Fig. 4A) Anthropogenic influence index for raven populations in the Great Basin, 2007-2016 (Fig. 4C) Sagebrush Distribution within the Biome Range Extent, as Derived from Classified Landsat Imagery The Sagebrush Biome Range Extent, as Derived from Classified Landsat Imagery Dataset: Index of Relative Ecosystem Resilience and Resistance across Sage-Grouse Management Zones Great Basin LCC Partners Great Basin LCC Partners Great Basin LCC Partners Heatmap