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This dataset displays Figure 7 from the publication Wilson, T.S., Sleeter, B.M., Sleeter, R. R., Soulard, C.E. 2014, Land use threats and protected areas: a scenario-based landscape level approach, Land, 3 (2): 362-389.Caption from Figure 7:  "Conversion threat index (CTI) in the Pacific Northwest from 2000 to 2100"Abstract: "Anthropogenic land use will likely present a greater challenge to biodiversity than climate change this century in the Pacific Northwest, USA. Even if species are equipped with the adaptive capacity to migrate in the face of a changing climate, they will likely encounter a human-dominated landscape as a major dispersal obstacle. Our goal was to identify, at the ecoregion-level, protected...
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The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has generated topographic moisture potential classes for the contiguous United States. These topographic moisture potential classes were created as part of an effort to map standardized, terrestrial ecosystems for the nation using a classification developed by NatureServe (Comer and others, 2003). Ecosystem distributions were modeled using a biophysical stratification approach developed for South America (Sayre and others, 2008) and now being implemented globally (Sayre and others, 2007). Substrate moisture regimes strongly influence the differentiation and distribution of terrestrial ecosystems, and are one of the key input layers in the ecosystem delineation process. The method...


    map background search result map search result map Conversion Threat Index (CTI), Pacific Northwest, (Figure 7 Wilson et al 2014) Terrestrial Ecosystems - Topographic Moisture Potential of the Conterminous United States Conversion Threat Index (CTI), Pacific Northwest, (Figure 7 Wilson et al 2014) Terrestrial Ecosystems - Topographic Moisture Potential of the Conterminous United States