This technical document supports the Forest Service’s requirement to assess the status of renewable natural resources as mandated by the Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act of 1974. It updates past reports on the trends and geographic patterns of species formally listed as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act of 1973. We compare the geographic occupancy of threatened and endangered species at the county-level against the geographic occupancy of a broader set of species thought to be at risk of extinction. This is done to determine if new areas where species rarity may be concentrated emerge. Here we document whether past trends and geographic occupancy patterns have changed over time, thereby providing...
This technical document supports the Forest Service’s requirement to assess the status of renewable ...
Identifying which species are at greatest risk, what makes them vulnerable, and where they are distr...
<p>(A) The number of species' whose median latitudes occur within one degree latitudinal bands; (B) ...
This technical document supports the Forest Service’s requirement to assess the status of renewable ...
associated with private forests in the United States are at risk of decline or extinction. This repo...
The Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act (RPA) of 1974 requires periodic assessment...
The U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) defines an endangered species as one at risk of extinction th...
The ecological diversity of Earth is majorly threatened by habitat loss due to the destruction by hu...
To assist risk assessors at the Department of Energy’s Savannah River Site (SRS), a Geographic Infor...
Species at risk of extinction are not uniformly distributed in space. Concentrations of threatened s...
Conservation status and threat assessments evaluate species’ relative risks of extinction globally, ...
The US government has multiple responsibilities for the protection of endangered species, many of th...
Protecting genetic diversity throughout the range of a species is important for conservation, as doi...
This Forestry and Natural Resources Fact Sheet 10 by Clemson University Extension Services provides ...
Identification of regions that warrant conservation attention is a top priority among global environ...
This technical document supports the Forest Service’s requirement to assess the status of renewable ...
Identifying which species are at greatest risk, what makes them vulnerable, and where they are distr...
<p>(A) The number of species' whose median latitudes occur within one degree latitudinal bands; (B) ...
This technical document supports the Forest Service’s requirement to assess the status of renewable ...
associated with private forests in the United States are at risk of decline or extinction. This repo...
The Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act (RPA) of 1974 requires periodic assessment...
The U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) defines an endangered species as one at risk of extinction th...
The ecological diversity of Earth is majorly threatened by habitat loss due to the destruction by hu...
To assist risk assessors at the Department of Energy’s Savannah River Site (SRS), a Geographic Infor...
Species at risk of extinction are not uniformly distributed in space. Concentrations of threatened s...
Conservation status and threat assessments evaluate species’ relative risks of extinction globally, ...
The US government has multiple responsibilities for the protection of endangered species, many of th...
Protecting genetic diversity throughout the range of a species is important for conservation, as doi...
This Forestry and Natural Resources Fact Sheet 10 by Clemson University Extension Services provides ...
Identification of regions that warrant conservation attention is a top priority among global environ...
This technical document supports the Forest Service’s requirement to assess the status of renewable ...
Identifying which species are at greatest risk, what makes them vulnerable, and where they are distr...
<p>(A) The number of species' whose median latitudes occur within one degree latitudinal bands; (B) ...