Terrestrial Linkage Potential - Mayacamas to Berryessa [ds2819]

SDE Raster Dataset

Open this dataset in BIOS
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Tags
Berryessa Range, Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument, California, Clear Lake, climate change, climate connectivity, climate resilience, Colusa, connectivity, corridors, CPAD, ecological integrity, Glenn, human modification, Lake, linkage, linkage potential, M2B, Marin, Mayacamas Mountains, Mayacamas to Berryessa, Mendocino, Napa, Northern California, Pepperwood, permeability, protected area, riparian, Solano, Sonoma, Tehama, terrestrial, Yolo


Summary

M2B Terrestrial Linkage Potential is a spatially-explicit measure of landscape connectivity based on the physical arrangements of habitat patches, disturbance, or environmental elements presumed to be important for wildlife movement. Locations with high values have a greater capacity to facilitate the movement of multiple terrestrial species and maintain ecological processes. Potential linkage pathways for terrestrial features within the M2B study area show connectivity between protected area nodes across a human modification resistance surface.

Description

M2B Terrestrial Linkage Potential is a science-based identification of critical terrestrial habitat between the Mayacamas Mountains and the Berryessa Range where long-term connectivity is threatened. This data was created as part of a multi-county climate connectivity assessment by the Mayacamas to Berryessa Landscape Connectivity Network (M2B) -- a public-private collaboration scientists and land managers. M2B integrates partner expertise with spatial modeling to create practical tools to help guide priorities for conservation and land management in Northern California's Inner Coast Range.

The M2B climate connectivity project directly involved stakeholders in the modeling and evaluation process, which included the following:

  1. Identification of potential habitat linkages based on terrestrial and riparian connectivity of natural habitats between existing protected areas (this data),

  2. Quantification of habitat corridor climate benefits based on state-of-the art, high-resolution climate projections,

  3. Generation of maps comparing the vulnerability of specific sites to environmental concerns (e.g., fire, drought) with their contribution to regional ecosystem integrity, and

  4. Creation of reports for 6 priority corridors that identify and evaluate specific parcels for connectivity and climate resilience.

The combination of high-resolution landscape permeability and climate datasets provides local decision-makers with flexible science-based tools for exploring, planning, and implementing habitat connectivity pathways. In the M2B region, parcel-scale acquisition and stewardship will be advanced primarily by private land trusts and public open space districts in concert with State and Federal land management agencies. The M2B methods are designed to be scalable and reproducible throughout Californin, and the formation of the M2B network provides a documented model for empowering local agencies and organizations to work effectively, and in a coordinated fashion, to achieve landscape-level conservation objectives.

Credits

The Mayacamas to Berryessa (M2B) Connectivity Network is a project funded by the California Landscape Conservation Partnership to Pepperwood Foundation. Key contributors include Morgan Gray, Adina Merenlender, Lisa Micheli, and the M2B steering committee. Citation: Gray M., L. Micheli, A.M. Merenlender. 2018. Methodology for building habitat connectivity for climate adaptation: Mayacamas to Berryessa Connectivity Network (M2B). A technical report by the Dwight Center for Conservation Science at Pepperwood, Santa Rosa CA. 51 pp.

Use limitations

Extent

West -123.543742 East -121.959923
North 39.896216 South 38.044628

Scale Range
Maximum (zoomed in) 1:5,000
Minimum (zoomed out) 1:150,000,000

ArcGIS Metadata

Topics and Keywords

Themes or categories of the resource environment


* Content type Downloadable Data
Export to FGDC CSDGM XML format as Resource Description No

Place keywords Berryessa Range, Berryessa Snow Mountain National Monument, California, Clear Lake, Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Marin, Mayacamas Mountains, Mayacamas to Berryessa, Mendocino, Napa, Northern California, Pepperwood, Solano, Sonoma, Tehama, Yolo

Temporal keywords 2017, 2018

Theme keywords ecological integrity, climate change, climate resilience, climate connectivity, connectivity, corridors, CPAD, human modification, linkage, linkage potential, M2B, Mayacamas to Berryessa, Pepperwood, permeability, protected area, riparian, terrestrial

Citation

Title Terrestrial Linkage Potential - Mayacamas to Berryessa [ds2819]
Creation date 2018-11-0800:00:00
Publication date 2019-04-1200:00:00


Presentation formats * digital table


Other citation details
Citation: Gray M., L. Micheli, A.M. Merenlender. 2018. Methodology for building habitat connectivity for climate adaptation: Mayacamas to Berryessa Connectivity Network (M2B). A technical report by the Dwight Center for Conservation Science at Pepperwood, Santa Rosa CA. 51 pp.


Citation Contacts

Responsible party
Individual's name Morgan Gray
Organization's name Pepperwood
Contact's position Conservation Analyst
Contact's role originator


Contact information
Phone
Voice (707) 591-9310

Address
Type postal
City Santa Rosa
Administrative area CA
Postal code 95404
e-mail address mgray@pepperwoodpreserve.org

Online resource
Location www.pepperwoodpreserve.org
Function performed download



Responsible party
Individual's name Lisa Micheli
Organization's name Pepperwood
Contact's role point of contact


Contact information
Phone
Voice (707) 591-9310

Address
Type postal
City Santa Rosa
Administrative area CA
Postal code 95404
e-mail address lmicheli@pepperwoodpreserve.org



Resource Details

Dataset languages * English(UNITED STATES)
Dataset character set utf8 - 8 bit UCS Transfer Format


Status completed
Spatial representation type * grid


* Processing environment Version 6.2 (Build 9200) ; Esri ArcGIS 10.5.1.7333


Credits
The Mayacamas to Berryessa (M2B) Connectivity Network is a project funded by the California Landscape Conservation Partnership to Pepperwood Foundation. Key contributors include Morgan Gray, Adina Merenlender, Lisa Micheli, and the M2B steering committee. Citation: Gray M., L. Micheli, A.M. Merenlender. 2018. Methodology for building habitat connectivity for climate adaptation: Mayacamas to Berryessa Connectivity Network (M2B). A technical report by the Dwight Center for Conservation Science at Pepperwood, Santa Rosa CA. 51 pp.
ArcGIS item properties
* Name DS2819_20190416_wm
* Location Server=; :; Database=; User=; Version=
* Access protocol ArcSDE Connection

Extents

Extent
Description
Northern California's Inner Coast Range between the Mayacamas Mountains and the Berryessa Range. The M2B project area (2,884,073 ac) included the inland region of the North Coast from all or part of 10 counties in Northern California: Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Marin, Mendocino, Napa, Solano, Sonoma, Tehama, and Yolo
Geographic extent
Bounding rectangle
Extent type Extent used for searching
* West longitude -123.543742
* East longitude -121.959923
* North latitude 39.896216
* South latitude 38.044628
* Extent contains the resource Yes

Temporal extent
Beginning date 2018-01-0100:00:00
Ending date 2018-11-0700:00:00

Extent in the item's coordinate system
* West longitude -13752826.496647
* East longitude -13576516.496647
* South latitude 4585732.150292
* North latitude 4850872.150292
* Extent contains the resource Yes

Resource Points of Contact

Point of contact
Individual's name Lisa Micheli
Organization's name Pepperwood
Contact's role point of contact


Contact information
Phone
Voice (707) 591-9310

Address
Type postal
City Santa Rosa
Administrative area CA
Postal code 95404
e-mail address lmicheli@pepperwoodpreserve.org



Resource Maintenance

Resource maintenance
Update frequency not planned


Spatial Reference

ArcGIS coordinate system
* Type Projected
* Geographic coordinate reference GCS_WGS_1984
* Projection WGS_1984_Web_Mercator_Auxiliary_Sphere
* Coordinate reference details
Projected coordinate system
Well-known identifier 102100
X origin -20037700
Y origin -30241100
XY scale 148923141.92838538
Z origin -100000
Z scale 10000
M origin -100000
M scale 10000
XY tolerance 0.001
Z tolerance 0.00020000000000000001
M tolerance 0.00020000000000000001
High precision true
Latest well-known identifier 3857
Well-known text PROJCS["WGS_1984_Web_Mercator_Auxiliary_Sphere",GEOGCS["GCS_WGS_1984",DATUM["D_WGS_1984",SPHEROID["WGS_1984",6378137.0,298.257223563]],PRIMEM["Greenwich",0.0],UNIT["Degree",0.0174532925199433]],PROJECTION["Mercator_Auxiliary_Sphere"],PARAMETER["False_Easting",0.0],PARAMETER["False_Northing",0.0],PARAMETER["Central_Meridian",0.0],PARAMETER["Standard_Parallel_1",0.0],PARAMETER["Auxiliary_Sphere_Type",0.0],UNIT["Meter",1.0],AUTHORITY["EPSG",3857]]

Reference system identifier
* Value 3857
* Codespace EPSG
* Version 8.8(9.3.1.2)


Data Quality

Lineage

Lineage statement
M2B Terrestrial Linkage potential was generated using Linkage Mapper to map the most cost-effective route between adjacent protected areas (i.e. nodes), using an index of human influence to approximate the difficulty of movement between locations (i.e., cost surface). Nodes were protected area locations > 50 acres in size, collated from the California Protected Area Database (2016a; calands.org) and amended to include additional properties managed by M2B stakeholders. The cost surface was a species-independent index of human modification based on stressors such as land use; land cover; and presence, use, and distance from roads (Theobald 2013; Dickson et al. 2016; data provided by The Nature Conservancy). Linkage Mapper specifications were set to include three potential connections and exclude linkages that intersect nodes. Linkages were clipped to a cost-weighted distance of 25 km, and scaled from 0 (low) to 1 (high). Detailed descriptions of and steps used to create this data product may be found in "Methodology for Building Habitat Connectivity for Climate Adaptation: Mayacamas to Berryessa Connectivity Network (M2B)" (Gray et al. 2018).

Geoprocessing history

Process
Process name
Date 2019-04-1610:41:55
Tool location c:\program files (x86)\arcgis\desktop10.6\ArcToolbox\Toolboxes\Data Management Tools.tbx\ProjectRaster
Command issued
Include in lineage when exporting metadata No


Process
Process name
Date 2019-04-1610:42:31
Tool location c:\program files (x86)\arcgis\desktop10.6\ArcToolbox\Toolboxes\Data Management Tools.tbx\CopyRaster
Command issued
Include in lineage when exporting metadata No


Distribution

Distribution format
* Name SDE Raster Dataset


Transfer options
Online source
Location https://www.wildlife.ca.gov/Data/BIOS
Function performed information

Online source
Location ftp://ftp.wildlife.ca.gov/BDB/GIS/BIOS/Public_Datasets/2800_2899/ds2819.zip
Function performed download

Fields

Details for object Terrestrial linkage potential
Definition
The linkage potential for terrestrial features between the protected areas (less than 50 acres in size) within the Mayacamas to Berryessa (M2B) project area.
Definition source
Gray M., L. Micheli, A.M. Merenlender. 2018. Methodology for building habitat connectivity for climate adaptation: Mayacamas to Berryessa Connectivity Network (M2B). A technical report by the Dwight Center for Conservation Science at Pepperwood, Santa Rosa CA. 51 pp.


Metadata Details

* Metadata language English(UNITED STATES)
Metadata character set utf8 - 8 bit UCS Transfer Format


Scope of the data described by the metadata * dataset
Scope name * dataset


* Last update 2019-08-07


ArcGIS metadata properties
Metadata format ArcGIS1.0
Standard or profile used to edit metadata FGDC


Created in ArcGIS for the item 2019-04-1213:55:50
Last modified in ArcGIS for the item 2019-08-0713:26:59


Automatic updates
Have been performed Yes
Last update 2019-08-0713:26:59


Metadata Contacts

Metadata contact
Individual's name Morgan Gray
Organization's name Pepperwood
Contact's position Conservation Analyst
Contact's role point of contact


Contact information
Phone
Voice (707) 591-9310

Address
Type postal
City Santa Rosa
Administrative area CA
Postal code 95404
e-mail address mgray@pepperwoodpreserve.org

Online resource
Location www.pepperwoodpreserve.org
Function performed download



Metadata Maintenance

Maintenance
Update frequency not planned


Metadata Constraints

Constraints
Limitations of use

None


Thumbnail and Enclosures