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Grizzly Bear Connectivity Mapping in the Canada–United States Trans-Border Region

Dates

Creation
2016-01-05 00:38:23
Last Update
2017-10-26 18:38:37
Acquisition
2015

Citation

Michael Proctor(Co-Investigator), Chris Servheen(Principal Investigator), Scott E Nielsen(Co-Investigator), WAYNE F. KASWORM(Co-Investigator), THOMAS G. RADANDT(Co-Investigator), A. GRANT MACHUTCHON(Co-Investigator), Mark S Boyce(Co-Investigator), Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative(administrator), LCC Network Data Steward(administrator), 2016-01-05(creation), 2017-10-26(lastUpdate), 2015(Acquisition), Grizzly Bear Connectivity Mapping in the Canada–United States Trans-Border Region

Summary

Fragmentation is a growing threat to wildlife worldwide and managers need solutions to reverseits impacts on species’ populations. Populations of grizzly bears (Ursus arctos), often considered an umbrellaand focal species for largemammal conservation, are fragmented by human settlement and major highways inthe trans-border region of southern British Columbia, northern Montana, Idaho, and northeasternWashington. To improve prospects for bear movement among 5 small fragmented grizzly bearsubpopulations, we asked 2 inter-related questions: Are there preferred linkage habitats for grizzly bearsacross settled valleys with major highways in the fragmented trans-border region, and if so, could we predictthem using a combination of resource [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

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md_metadata.json 23.39 KB application/json
metadata.xml
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49.72 KB application/vnd.iso.19139-2+xml
PROCTOR et al 2015 Linkage Paper.pdf 773.57 KB application/pdf

Material Request Instructions

LCC Network Data Steward(Point of Contact)

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative
  • LC MAP - Landscape Conservation Management and Analysis Portal

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Provenance

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Additional Information

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Type Scheme Key
File Identifier file identifier 568b107fe4b0e7594ee76c15

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