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This data product contains estimates of habitat quality and connectivity for mountain lion, mule deer, desert bighorn sheep, and black bear, and combined estimates of high habitat and connectivity areas for all species. The analysis area was a 236,000 square kilometers that encompassed the Navajo Nation, which includes portions of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. The estimates of habitat quality were created with spatially explicit habitat variables and either an expert-based linear combination process (for mountain lion and mule deer) or a generalized linear mixed model-based estimation that used radio-collar telemetry data (for desert bighorn sheep, black bear, and pronghorn; collected between 2005-2011). Habitat...
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MtnLionOverallRange is an ESRI SDE Feature Class showing Overall Range for Mountain Lion (Felis concolor) in Colorado. Overall Range is defined as the area that encompasses all known activity areas within the observed range of a population of Mountain Lion. This information was derived from field personnel. A variety of data capture techniques were used including drawing on mylar overlays at 1:50,000 scale USGS county mapsheets and implementation of the SmartBoard Interactive Whiteboard using stand-up, real-time digitizing at various scales (Cowardin, M., M. Flenner. March 2003. Maximizing Mapping Resources. GeoWorld 16(3):32-35). Dataset was acquired from a third party distributor who obtained it from CDOW in...
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This map shows the distribution, vegetation departure, current/future landscape intactness, current/future change agents, and potential for change of Mountain Lion Habitat in the study area. These data are provided by Bureau of Land Management (BLM) "as is" and may contain errors or omissions. The User assumes the entire risk associated with its use of these data and bears all responsibility in determining whether these data are fit for the User's intended use. These data may not have the accuracy, resolution, completeness, timeliness, or other characteristics appropriate for applications that potential users of the data may contemplate. The User is encouraged to carefully consider the content of the metadata file...
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This map shows the current predicted distribution of Mountain Lion, along with current and near-term status and long term potential for change. These data are provided by Bureau of Land Management (BLM) "as is" and may contain errors or omissions. The User assumes the entire risk associated with its use of these data and bears all responsibility in determining whether these data are fit for the User's intended use. These data may not have the accuracy, resolution, completeness, timeliness, or other characteristics appropriate for applications that potential users of the data may contemplate. The User is encouraged to carefully consider the content of the metadata file associated with these data. The BLM should be...
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This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC) within mountain lion potentially suitable habitat.The mountain lion potentially suitable habitat extent was determined using the SWReGAP Vertebrate Habitat Distribution Models for the mountain lion clipped to the study area for the SLV-TP Landscape Assessment. This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC). Potential for change (PFC) was determined by calculating the maximum potential for change among all change agents within each 1 km reporting unit. Current and future landscape intactness (LCM_C_FZ and LCM_N_FZ) are based on measures of landscape...
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This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC) within mountain lion potentially suitable habitat.The mountain lion potentially suitable habitat extent was determined using the SWReGAP Vertebrate Habitat Distribution Models for the mountain lion clipped to the study area for the SLV-TP Landscape Assessment. This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC). Potential for change (PFC) was determined by calculating the maximum potential for change among all change agents within each 1 km reporting unit. Current and future landscape intactness (LCM_C_FZ and LCM_N_FZ) are based on measures of landscape...
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This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC) within mountain lion potentially suitable habitat.The mountain lion potentially suitable habitat extent was determined using the SWReGAP Vertebrate Habitat Distribution Models for the mountain lion clipped to the study area for the SLV-TP Landscape Assessment. This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC). Potential for change (PFC) was determined by calculating the maximum potential for change among all change agents within each 1 km reporting unit. Current and future landscape intactness (LCM_C_FZ and LCM_N_FZ) are based on measures of landscape...
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MtnLionHumanConflictArea is an ESRI SDE Feature Class showing Human Conflict for Mountain Lion (Felis concolor) in Colorado. Human Conflict Areas are defined as areas where Mountain Lions have been involved in incidents (conflict with humans that may have serious results), an attack on a human, predation on domestic pets, or depredation on livestock held in close proximity to human habitation. This information was derived from field personnel. A variety of data capture techniques were used including drawing on mylar overlays at 1:50,000 scale USGS county mapsheets and implementation of the SmartBoard Interactive Whiteboard using stand-up, real-time digitizing at various scales (Cowardin, M., M. Flenner. March 2003....
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MtnLionPeripheralRange is an ESRI SDE Feature Class showing Peripheral Range for Mountain Lion (Felis concolor) in Colorado. Peripheral Range is defined as an area of Mountain Lion overall range where habitat is limited and populations are isolated. Population density may be lower than in the central part of their range. This information was derived from field personnel. A variety of data capture techniques were used including drawing on mylar overlays at 1:50,000 scale USGS county mapsheets and implementation of the SmartBoard Interactive Whiteboard using stand-up, real-time digitizing at various scales (Cowardin, M., M. Flenner. March 2003. Maximizing Mapping Resources. GeoWorld 16(3):32-35). Dataset was acquired...
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This map contains:Terrestrial Intactness results for the State of Utah and the Colorado Plateau Ecoregion, 1 km resolution.Terrestrial Species Intactness results clipped to 15 different species' distributions, showing the TI status/condition for each species of interest in the COP.These datasets provide an estimate of current terrestrial intactness (i.e. condition) based on the extent to which human impacts such as agriculture, urban development, natural resource extraction, and invasive species have disrupted the landscape across the State of Utah and the Colorado Plateau Ecoregion. Terrestrial intactness values will be high in areas where these impacts are low.Documentation of model structure and input data and...
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This data product contains estimates of habitat quality and connectivity for mountain lion, mule deer, desert bighorn sheep, and black bear, and combined estimates of high habitat and connectivity areas for all species. The analysis area was a 236,000 square kilometers that encompassed the Navajo Nation, which includes portions of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. The estimates of habitat quality were created with spatially explicit habitat variables and either an expert-based linear combination process (for mountain lion and mule deer) or a generalized linear mixed model-based estimation that used radio-collar telemetry data (for desert bighorn sheep, black bear, and pronghorn; collected between 2005-2011). Habitat...
Categories: Data; Types: Map Service, OGC WFS Layer, OGC WMS Layer, OGC WMS Service; Tags: Antilocapra americana, Antilocapra americana, Arizona, Arizona, EARTH SCIENCE > LAND SURFACE > LANDSCAPE, All tags...
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Studies utilizing Global Positioning System (GPS) telemetry rarely result in 100% fix success rates (FSR). Many assessments of wildlife resource use do not account for missing data, either assuming data loss is random or because a lack of practical treatment for systematic data loss. Several studies have explored how the environment, technological features, and animal behavior influence rates of missing data in GPS telemetry, but previous spatially explicit models developed to correct for sampling bias have been specified to small study areas, on a small range of data loss, or to be species-specific, limiting their general utility. Here we explore environmental effects on GPS fix acquisition rates across a wide...
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This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC) within mountain lion potentially suitable habitat.The mountain lion potentially suitable habitat extent was determined using the SWReGAP Vertebrate Habitat Distribution Models for the mountain lion clipped to the study area for the SLV-TP Landscape Assessment. This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC). Potential for change (PFC) was determined by calculating the maximum potential for change among all change agents within each 1 km reporting unit. Current and future landscape intactness (LCM_C_FZ and LCM_N_FZ) are based on measures of landscape...
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This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC) within mountain lion potentially suitable habitat.The mountain lion potentially suitable habitat extent was determined using the SWReGAP Vertebrate Habitat Distribution Models for the mountain lion clipped to the study area for the SLV-TP Landscape Assessment. This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC). Potential for change (PFC) was determined by calculating the maximum potential for change among all change agents within each 1 km reporting unit. Current and future landscape intactness (LCM_C_FZ and LCM_N_FZ) are based on measures of landscape...
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This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC) within mountain lion potentially suitable habitat.The mountain lion potentially suitable habitat extent was determined using the SWReGAP Vertebrate Habitat Distribution Models for the mountain lion clipped to the study area for the SLV-TP Landscape Assessment. This dataset presents current and future change agent models and combined future potential for change (PFC). Potential for change (PFC) was determined by calculating the maximum potential for change among all change agents within each 1 km reporting unit. Current and future landscape intactness (LCM_C_FZ and LCM_N_FZ) are based on measures of landscape...
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This map shows the potential current distribution of mountain lion, in the context of current and near-term terrestrial intactness and long-term potential for climate change and energy development. These data are provided by Bureau of Land Management (BLM) "as is" and may contain errors or omissions. The User assumes the entire risk associated with its use of these data and bears all responsibility in determining whether these data are fit for the User's intended use. These data may not have the accuracy, resolution, completeness, timeliness, or other characteristics appropriate for applications that potential users of the data may contemplate. The User is encouraged to carefully consider the content of the metadata...
Estimation of connectivity for multiple species could increase the efficiency of resource management and elucidate trade-offs among maintenance of connectivity for different taxa. We identified potential areas of high connectivity for 5 species of mammals on the Navajo Nation and adjacent lands in Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico, USA: mountain lion (Puma concolor), mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus), desert bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis nelsoni), American black bear (Ursus americanus), and pronghorn (Antilocapra americana). These species were identified by the Navajo Nation as relevant to the benefit of their present and future generations. We used telemetry data to calculate utilization distributions, derive model...
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This map shows the potential current distribution of mountain lion, in the context of current and near-term terrestrial intactness and long-term potential for climate change and energy development.
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This data product contains estimates of habitat quality for mountain lion. The analysis area was a 236,000 square kilometers that encompassed the Navajo Nation, which includes portions of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. The estimates of habitat quality were created with spatially explicit habitat variables and either an expert-based linear combination process (for mountain lion and mule deer) or a generalized linear mixed model-based estimation that used radio-collar telemetry data (for desert bighorn sheep, black bear, and pronghorn; collected between 2005-2011). Habitat variables varied among species but included vegetation type, terrain ruggedness, topographic position index (TPI), road density, distance to water,...


map background search result map search result map Mountain Lion distribution for Arizona, USA Mountain Lion Peripheral Range Mountain Lion Overall Range Mountain Lion Human Conflict Area Colorado Plateau REA Conservation Elements - Terrestrial Species: Mountain Lion Mountain Lion Habitat Quality SRLCC_2011_Fleishman_NavajoNationConnectivity_Data Metadata Variable Terrestrial GPS Telemetry Detection Rates: Parts 1 - 7—Data BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Near Term Human Development BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Near Term Fire BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion Habitat 1km Poly BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Near Term Climate BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Human Development BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Near Term Landscape Intactness BLM REA COP 2010 Colorado Plateau (COP) Distribution of the Mountain Lion BLM REA SOD 2010 TS 552479 Mountain Lion 1KM 4KM BLM REA SLV 2013 Mountain Lion Assessment BLM REA COP 2014 UCS COP Terrestrial Intactness  552479 Mountain Lion BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Near Term Human Development BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Near Term Fire BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion Habitat 1km Poly BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Near Term Climate BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Human Development BLM REA SLV 2013 MountainLion PFC 1km Poly Near Term Landscape Intactness SRLCC_2011_Fleishman_NavajoNationConnectivity_Data Metadata Mountain Lion Peripheral Range Mountain Lion distribution for Arizona, USA Mountain Lion Human Conflict Area Mountain Lion Habitat Quality Mountain Lion Overall Range Colorado Plateau REA Conservation Elements - Terrestrial Species: Mountain Lion BLM REA SLV 2013 Mountain Lion Assessment BLM REA SOD 2010 TS 552479 Mountain Lion 1KM 4KM Variable Terrestrial GPS Telemetry Detection Rates: Parts 1 - 7—Data BLM REA COP 2014 UCS COP Terrestrial Intactness  552479 Mountain Lion BLM REA COP 2010 Colorado Plateau (COP) Distribution of the Mountain Lion