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Extent and approximate location of historic wetland habitats in Indiana, Iowa, and Wisconsin. Partial state coverage in Minnesota and South Dakota. NWI data last updated as of 1 May 2016. Data accessed 11 July 2016.
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River Conservation Opportunity Areas represent areas of the state where organizations and individuals working on the conservation of SGCN and their habitat would be most likely to successfully implement the conservation actions summarized in the Wildlife Action Plan for taxonomic and natural community groups. Providing information to help people make decisions about “where” to implement conservation actions is an important related aspect of conservation actions. Although most COAs have been given boundaries, they are indeed “fuzzy”, meaning their application can vary considerably according to context or conditions and they are not fixed or definitive—they will move, depending on the objectives.
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Conservation Opportunity Areas are places in Illinois: with significant existing or potential wildlife and habitat resources; where partners are willing to plan, implement, and evaluate conservation actions; where financial and human resources are available; and where conservation is motivated by an agreed-upon conservation purpose and set of objectives.To create a list of places in the state fitting this description, scientists with Illinois Natural History Survey identified priority areas for conservation, using a variety of tools, such as Audubon’s Important Bird Areas and The Nature Conservancy’s portfolio sites. The centerpiece of their analyses, however, was a dataset showing the state’s key blocks of habitat...
The Wildlife Action Network is composed of mapped terrestrial and aquatic habitats, buffers, and connectors that represent a diversity of quality habitats that support Species in Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN). The Network is made up of mapped habitat representing viable or persistent populations and “richness hotspots” of Species in Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN). Added to this information are other data on the relative condition of habitat including spatially prioritized and connected Sites of Biodiversity Significance, Lakes of Biological Significance, and Streams with “exceptional” Indices of Biological Integrity. Consideration should be given to projects or activities that could result in the loss, degradation...
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Bottomlands of large rivers within the Mississippi River Basin. Derived by combining the Mississippi alluvial plain with natural floodplains created by the Scientific Assessment and Strategy Team for the Upper Mississippi, and statewide floodplain coverages where available. While the Mississippi alluvial plain is not entirely bottomland (e.g. Crowley's Ridge), excluding these non-bottomland areas from analysis would exclude opportunities to expand existing forest patches and enhance connectivity. NOTE: Floodplain coverage in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Missouri is incomplete due to incomplete data availability as of October 2016.
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Systematic conservation planning is well suited to address the many large-scale biodiversity conservation challenges facing the Appalachian region. However, broad, well-connected landscapes will be required to sustain many of the natural resources important to this area into the future. If these landscapes are to be resilient to impending change, it will likely require an orchestrated and collaborative effort reaching across jurisdictional and political boundaries. The first step in realizing this vision is prioritizing discrete places and actions that hold the greatest promise for the protection of biodiversity. Five conservation design elements covering many critical ecological processes and patterns across the...
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This represents historical reference conditions for old tallgrass and wet prairie areas. Thus, offers information toward ecological land management efforts.These data represent the areas that the US GLO land surveyors and French/Spanish surveyors considered to be prairie in Missouri.
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The U.S. Forest Service and USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service are working together to improve the health of forests where public and private lands meet. Through the Joint Chiefs’ Landscape Restoration Partnership, the two USDA agencies are restoring landscapes, reducing wildfire threats to communities and landowners, protecting water quality and enhancing wildlife habitat. More information: http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detail/nj/home/?cid=stelprdb1244394
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Mississippi River Basin Gridded SSURGO Hydric Classification – Presence "hydclprs". An indication of the proportion of the map unit that is hydric, based on the hydric classification of individual map unit components.
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The subset of all NRCS Common Resource Areas (CRA), version 1.2, that can support native prairie habitats within the Mississippi River Basin. A Common Resource Area is defined as a geographical area where resource concerns, problems, or treatment needs are similar. It is considered a subdivision of an existing Major Land Resource Area (MLRA) map delineation or polygon. Landscape conditions, soil, climate, human considerations, and other natural resource information are used to determine the geographic boundaries of a CRA.


map background search result map search result map Prairie Ecological System (MRB) UMRGLR JV - Openland Breeding Bird Habitat Priorities Missouri - Historic Prairie Gridded SSURGO - Hydric Classification Gridded SSURGO - Available Water Storage (0-20 cm) Landfire v.1.2.0 - Environmental Site Potential (MRB) NWI Emergent Wetlands (MRB) NWI Forested Wetlands (MRB) Basin-wide Restoration Opportunities - Grazing Appalachian LCC Landscape Conservation Design Phase 1 Regional Linkages NWI Historic Wetlands Floodplains - Large Bottomland Ecological System Illinois Conservation Opportunity Areas Minnesota Wildlife Action Network NRCS - USFS Joint Chiefs Landscape Restoration Partnership (2015) Wisconsin - River Conservation Opportunity Areas Basin-wide Restoration Opportunities by Production System (2017) Basin-wide Restoration Opportunities - Corn/Soybeans (2017) Scioto River Basin (HU4-0506) - Riparian Implementation Opportunities (2017) Forest and Wetland Implementation Opportunities - Prioritized Wisconsin - River Conservation Opportunity Areas Illinois Conservation Opportunity Areas Missouri - Historic Prairie Minnesota Wildlife Action Network UMRGLR JV - Openland Breeding Bird Habitat Priorities NWI Historic Wetlands Appalachian LCC Landscape Conservation Design Phase 1 Regional Linkages Prairie Ecological System (MRB) NRCS - USFS Joint Chiefs Landscape Restoration Partnership (2015) NWI Forested Wetlands (MRB) NWI Emergent Wetlands (MRB) Gridded SSURGO - Hydric Classification Gridded SSURGO - Available Water Storage (0-20 cm) Landfire v.1.2.0 - Environmental Site Potential (MRB) Basin-wide Restoration Opportunities - Grazing Floodplains - Large Bottomland Ecological System Basin-wide Restoration Opportunities by Production System (2017) Basin-wide Restoration Opportunities - Corn/Soybeans (2017) Scioto River Basin (HU4-0506) - Riparian Implementation Opportunities (2017) Forest and Wetland Implementation Opportunities - Prioritized