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A region polygon dataset categorizing land in terms of ecological significance and status of protection in the Central Basin and Range (CBR) Rapid Ecoregional Assessment. This dataset identifies lands that have been identified as ecologically significant to biodiveristy but not yet legally protected (Places I - Sites of High Biodiversity), lands that have some type of protection status, often federal or state (Places II - Specially Designated Areas of Ecological and/or Cultural Value), and lands that may be ecologically significant but are managed for multiple use (Places III – Other Managed Lands).
Types: Downloadable;
Tags: BLM,
Bureau of Land Management,
CBR 2010,
Central Basin and Range,
Conservation,
The potential effect of development on patch size was used as an index of fragmentation. Patch size was quantified for baseline conditions for foothill shrublands and woodlands. This provides a reference for comparing patch size for relatively undeveloped patches (Terrestrial Development Index scores less than or equal to 1 percent) of Foothill Shrublands Woodlands.
Active Water Rights of Montana. The data consists of estimated locations of all the active recorded points of diversion and points of use in the water rights database. There are four separate spatial layers: Points of diversion, Points of Use, Points of Reservoirs, and Points of Use for Irrigation (a subset of Points of Use). The version of this data available at the State Library is updated on a weekly basis. For administrative purposes, the original version of all active water rights is given (i.e. Version ID = 1). If change of information about a particular water right has occurred over time, there will be an additional version of the water right, and depending on how many changes, there will only be one other...
The Wyoming Basin Rapid Ecoregional Assessment project area is defined by all 5th level watersheds (HUC10) that intersect the boundary of the Wyoming Basin Ecoregion. All other datasets used for Wyoming Basing Rapid Ecoregional Assessment are clipped to this boundary.
Proportion of Riparian Land Cover (540 m scale) in the Wyoming Basins Ecoregional Assessment area, produced by Hanser and others, 2011 (Hanser, S. E., M. Leu, S. T. Knick, and C. L. Aldridge, eds. 2011. Sagebrush ecosystem conservation and management: ecoregional assessment tools and models for the Wyoming Basins. Allen Press, Lawrence, KS.), by using a circular 6 pixel focal moving window analysis. http://sagemap.wr.usgs.gov/wbea.aspx#CAdata
All wetlands within the Wyoming Basin REA Project area including lake, riverine, or river wetland types compiled from National Wetlands Inventory data from the five states in the project area.
The potential effect of development on patch size was used as an index of fragmentation. Patch size was quantified for relatively undeveloped patches (Terrestrial Development Index scores less than or equal to 1 percent) of foothill shrublands and woodlands. Because TDI is calculated for a 2.25 km radius moving window, relatively undeveloped patches are defined at this analysis scale. Patch sizes for relatively undeveloped areas can then be compared to baseline conditions.
The consolidated dataset represents polygonal fire perimeters of known fire occurrences between pre-1950 and 2010 within the state of Wyoming. Where it was included or possible to determine, information about fire types, causes, names, and dates has been retained. The following sources were used to consolidate all known and mapped fire occurrences: the USGS GeoMAC program, the National Park Service (Yellowstone National Park), the Monitoring Trends in Burn Severity (MTBS) program, the US Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management, the Western Fires US database, and the National Fire and Aviation Management Web Applications (FAMWEB) program.
WRPOD is a point shapefile created nightly from data in the Utah Division of Water Rights Database. The WRPOD shapefile is primarily used by the Division of Water Rights as a complete record of point of diversion locations. Points of Diversion, Wells, Tunnels, Sumps, Drains, Springs, Streams, Rivers, Creeks. State of Utah, points of diversion. Contact person: Lee Eschler Contact organization: State of Utah, Department of Natural Resources, Division of Water Rights Contact position: Engineering Technician Contact voice telephone: (801) 538 7408 Contact facsimile telephone: (801) 538 7467 Contact electronic mail address: leeeschler@utah.gov
This is a StoryMap used to organize a series of web applications related to Alaska wildland fires. Alaska Wildland Fire Information uses a tabbed layout. Each tab as a specific fire-related theme. The five (5) tabs are: Wildland Fires: This tab provides access to a broad suite of information related to wildland fires in Alaska. Lightning: This tab is tailored to show current and recent lightning activity in Alaska and neighboring territories. Fire Spotter: This tab is designed to provided information used on wildland fire detection missions. Reporting and Admin: This tab is designed to provide information commonly incorporated into wildland fire reports. Fire History and Fuels: This tab is tailored to provide information...
This story map is a part of the General Land Office (GLO) Record of the Week (ROTW) project. Each week, the BLM ES will release a story map as a part of the GLO ROTW Project. This project was initiated by BLM Eastern States to share unique records from the GLO Records collection. This story map is about the early history of Jackson, Mississippi.
Rail road lines within the Wyoming Basin project area. Data origin Federal Railroad Administration (FRA). The Rail Network is a comprehensive database of the nation's railway system at the 1:100,000 scale or better
Current West Nile Virus risk (0 to 100), with highest risk being 100 across WYB study area. Data was attained from Ryan Harrigan (iluvsa@ucla.edu) at the Center for Tropical Research, Institute of the Environment, University of California, Los Angeles. work is being currently submitted to Global Change Biology.
Ranks of landscape level ecological values for aspen were summarized by township, in the Wyoming Basin REA project area. Landscape level value based on area of aspen. See table 15.3, Chapter 2, and the Appendix in the Wyoming Basin REA report at http://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/ofr20151155 for additional details.
Potential changes in baseline juniper woodlands based on overlap with the projected bioclimatic envelope distribution. To account for the differences between the current distribution and modeled bioclimatic envelopes, we used results from CCCM3, in 2030, and classified each modeled biome into three change categories: 1 distributions that potentially could decline because current and projected envelope distributions do not coincide, 2 distributions that are not expected to change because the current and projected envelope distributions overlap, and 3 distributions that have the potential for expansion outside the current envelope distribution. Next, we classified potential for change in the current distribution of...
This data was created by the CPW GIS Unit. Property boundaries are created by dissolving CDOWParcels by the property name, and property type and appending State Park boundaries designated as having public access. All parcel data correspond to legal transactions made by the CPW Real Estate Unit. The boundaries of the CDOW Parcels were digitized using metes and bounds, BLM's GCDB dataset, the PLSS dataset (where the GCDB dataset was unavailable) and using existing digital data on the boundaries.
For Greater Sage Grouse connectivity we assessed development levels based on the regional Terrestrial Development Index (TDI) map, and then used the resulting output to calculate patch size and structural connectivity metrics. We mapped the structural connectivity of relatively undeveloped areas (TDI less than or equal to 1 percent) at three inter patch distances based on connectivity analysis; local (0.27 km), landscape (2.97 km), and regional (3.78 km) scales. See Chapter 2 Assessment Framework and Appendix of the Wyoming Basin REA Open File Report for additional details.
Landscape-level ecological value was based on length of perennial and ephemeral/intermittent streams within a 5th-level watershed assessed as the length of stream per area of watershed.
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