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Filters: partyWithName: Meredith McClure (X) > partyWithName: LCC Network Data Steward (X)

Folder: ROOT ( Show direct descendants )

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These layers show land ownership and status of all Canadian and U.S. lands that fall within the boundaries of the Great Northern Landscae Conservation Cooperative. Layers were compiled from various sources, each with it’s own metadata reference file.
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In this project, the Sonoran Institute, Center for Large Landscape Conservation, Montana State University’s Western Transportation Institute (WTI) and Future West investigated the potential impacts of future housing development on transportation to determine where increased traffic volumes will most likely impact connectivity for carnivores. The focus of this pilot study was Flathead and Lincoln counties in northwestern Montana. The results focus on mitigation for rarer species like bears and wolverines; it does not address or use data from road kill “hot spots” which are primarily deer and other common ungulates.This effort is unique in that it projects development into the future and identifies potential problem...
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Roads present a growing threat to the wildlife of the U.S. Northern Rocky Mountains, a region spanning the Greater Yellowstone, Salmon-Selway, and Crown of the Continent Ecosystems that is unique in continuing to support a full suite of native ungulates and carnivores. The continued viability of wildlife populations are dependent on their continued ability to move, including daily movements among local resources, migrations between seasonal ranges, long-range dispersal supporting gene flow, and species range shifts over time in response to changing conditions. As wildlife movements across landscapes intersect with human movements via roads, both human safety and the health of wildlife populations are impacted....
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Patch importance provides a measure of how large, intact, and connected a “patch” of habitat is for each biome type. More “intact” patches are depicted using a more saturated (darker) color, whereas less intact have lighter, less saturated colors. Centrality flow lines depict the network of movement pathways that conceptually connect with the patches of a given biome type. Thicker and darker red lines indicate more central locations where more “movement flow” is predicted to occur, while the location of the lines depicts where the movement pathways are best placed to avoid places of high human activity.


    map background search result map search result map Where People and Wildlife Intersect: Prioritizing Mitigation of Road Impacts on Wildlife Connectivity GNLCC Data Richness Wall Map GNLCC Jurisdictions Wall Map GNLCC Reference Wall Map 5 Regional Data Richness Wall Maps Great Northern Ecological Connectivity Data Atlas Transboundary Biome-Level Patch Importance and Centrality Flowlines GNLCC Jurisdictional Boundaries Transboundary Region Reference Map GNLCC Focal Connectivity Areas v5 Webinar: Prioritizing Mitigation of Road Impacts on Wildlife Connectivity - Meredith McClure Webinar: Predicting future conflicts between roads and wildlife connectivity Where People and Wildlife Intersect: Prioritizing Mitigation of Road Impacts on Wildlife Connectivity Webinar: Predicting future conflicts between roads and wildlife connectivity Webinar: Prioritizing Mitigation of Road Impacts on Wildlife Connectivity - Meredith McClure GNLCC Data Richness Wall Map GNLCC Jurisdictions Wall Map GNLCC Reference Wall Map 5 Regional Data Richness Wall Maps Great Northern Ecological Connectivity Data Atlas Transboundary Biome-Level Patch Importance and Centrality Flowlines Transboundary Region Reference Map GNLCC Jurisdictional Boundaries GNLCC Focal Connectivity Areas v5