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Land Cover Analysis
Selecting Conservation AreasThe Goal:Maintain biological diversity. The Issue:How can organizations and agencies decide which land to select for conservation areas? The Answer:A remotely-sensed landscape map that ranks critical habitats based on conservation information. The Example:
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| Subset of the Southern New Jersey land cover data that were created using the methodologies described in the C-CAP protocol. This data set was integrated with New Jersey land use data to create the comprehensive land use/land cover maps used by Endangered and Nongame Species Program (ENSP). |
The land cover was integrated with updated versions of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection's land use maps to create the land use/land cover data set. Using Environmental Systems Research Institute's (ESRI®) ArcInfo® and ArcView® GIS software, ENSP developed a method to identify and prioritize critical wetland, grassland, and forested habitats using the resultant land cover/land use maps. The following example steps through a generalized and simplified version of the methodology used to prioritize critical wetland areas in New Jersey.
To identify critical wetlands, all of the land with a wetland classification was extracted from the land use/land cover data. The following data layers were overlaid with the wetland maps for use in the final conservation prioritization:
Each of the wetland areas was ranked to determine conservation priority. Each wetland parcel was ranked by several criteria, including the number of priority species found within the parcel, and its proximity to already-conserved areas. Grassland and forest habitats were also ranked for conservation priority using similar techniques.
New Jersey was divided into five regions and each region was analyzed. Below is the final conservation-landscape critical-areas map for the Delaware Bay region. (The other four landscape regions are Coastal, Pinelands, Skylands, and Piedmont/Plains.)
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| Delaware Bay landscape region critical areas map. Map provided by the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife's Endangered and Nongame Species Program (ENSP. |
Many counties in New Jersey are using the data and information from the landscape project for countywide assessments. Chester Township, in central New Jersey, is using the data to pinpoint land that has a potential for open space acquisition. The township is overlaying the landscape project maps with urban data (i.e., developed areas, roads) and open space data (public land that is currently protected). Using the priority information, officials have identified a parcel of relatively high-priority land that links together two other pieces of public land. Acquiring the parcel of high priority that also links existing open space results in more protected habitat.
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| The area within the red circle illustrates critical habitat that would, if acquired, tie together two areas of public open space (indicated by hatched lines) in Chester Township. Map provided by the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife's Endangered and Nongame Species Program (ENSP). |
These maps take the guesswork out of managing wildlife habitat, prioritizing conservation areas, and planning open space acquisitions for many agencies, including state, county, municipal, and private organizations. The information provides a sound basis for proactive decision making as well as conflict resolution before proposed development, logging, or dredging occurs. The landscape maps also provide citizens with the tools to protect rare species habitat at the local level.
To learn more about New Jersey's Landscape Project for the Protection of Rare Species, visit www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw/ensp/pdf/landbro.pdf (Requires a plug-in such as Adobe® Reader® to view).
Dobson and others, 1995. NOAA Coastal Change Analysis Program (C-CAP): Guidance for Regional Implementation. NOAA Technical Report NMFS 123. U.S. Department of Commerce.