Core Habitat for Imperiled Species
收藏US Fish and Wildlife Service Open Data2026-03-28 收录
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<p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'>Core Habitat for Imperiled Species is one of a suite of products from the Nature’s Network project. Nature’s Network is a collaborative effort to identify shared priorities for conservation in the Northeast, considering the value of fish and wildlife species and the natural areas they inhabit. This product represents a regional network of the most intact of habitats estimated to be most important for sustaining populations of imperiled species, currently based on over 600 Species of Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN).<br /><br /></p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'>Core Habitats can be viewed as the most intact areas that contain habitats likely to support high levels of biological diversity, rare species, and/or imperiled species in any given landscape. This map can help to focus attention on opportunities to conserve the most intact habitats for imperiled species, often including localities where such habitats persist in otherwise degraded surrounding landscapes. The data may also be considered as the basis for multi-species habitat conservation to secure a broad suite of imperiled species--before regulatory action is needed.</p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'><strong>Intended Uses</strong></p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'><ul><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>Protect biodiversity by understanding the ecological importance of individual areas</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>Identify the most intact habitats for imperiled species, often including localities where such habitats persist in otherwise degraded surrounding landscapes.</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>Serve as a fine-filter complement to the coarse-filter perspective of the terrestrial and aquatic core areas.</span></li><li>Core Habitat for Imperiled Species is based from the integration of species occurrence data classified by habitat type and measures of intactness and resiliency. Other sources of information that identify opportunities and risks of change in these areas would be particularly complementary in directing action. You might explore this product in combination with:</li></ul><ol><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>The Habitat Condition layer to reveal the Ecological Integrity Score that contributed to an area being identified as a Core Habitat</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>The Habitat Importance layer to learn the habitat class(es) within a Core Habitat and the HUC6 watershed to which it belongs.</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>The Terrestrial Core-connector Network to identify “corridors” that could facilitate the movement of plants and animals and increase the resiliency of the imperiled species habitat to uncertain land use and climate change.</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>The Aquatic Core Networks and Terrestrial Core-connector Networks to prioritize intact and resilient places also identified as Core Habitats for Imperiled Species.</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>The Secured Lands, Eastern U.S. layer to identify the habitats that remain unsecured from development, and thus could represent priorities for land protection.</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>The Probability of Development layers (2030 and 2080) and regional vulnerability layers to identify the critical habitat for imperiled species that is relatively vulnerable to future development, and thus could represent priorities for land protection.</span></li></ol></p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'><strong>Description and Derivation</strong></p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'>If protected, Core Habitat for Imperiled Species will sustain a broad diversity of fish, wildlife, plants, and the key ecosystems on which they depend. Core Habitat is based on the most intact of the habitats identified from Habitat Condition for Imperiled Species. That Nature’s Network product identifies areas of high importance for imperiled species in conditions ranging from intact to degraded. Important areas that scored in the top ⅓ of condition scores (>82) and were larger than a minimum size (0.18 ha) were extracted to form the Core Habitat for Imperiled Species. </p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'><strong>Known Issues and Uncertainties</strong></p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'>As with any project carried out across such a large area, this product is subject to limitations. The results by themselves are not a prescription for on-the-ground action; users are encouraged to verify, with field visits and site-specific knowledge, the value of any areas identified in the project. Known issues and uncertainties include the following:</p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'><br /></span></p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'><ul><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>The results do not incorporate important social, economic, or feasibility factors.</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>Users are cautioned against using the data on too small an area (for example, a small parcel of land), as the data may not be sufficiently accurate at that level of resolution.</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>The identification of areas as providing habitat for imperiled species does not necessarily mean that imperiled species are actually present in those areas.</span></li><li><span style='font-family:inherit; font-style:inherit; font-weight:inherit;'>The mapping of ecosystem locations and development is known to be imperfect, which consequently affects the mapped values for ecosystem integrity and species habitat. While the ecosystem mapping is anticipated to correctly reflect broad patterns of ecosystem occurrence, errors in classification and placement do occur, as with any regional GIS data. In addition, errors in mapping and alignment of development, roads, traffic rates, and a number of other data layers can affect the model results.</span></li></ul></p><p style='margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:4px; padding:0px; border:0px; font-size:14.4014px; font-family:"Lucida Grande", helvetica, sans-serif; color:rgb(102, 102, 102);'><br />Please see the Technical Documentation for additional discussion of issues and limitations, including known limitations of Natural Heritage program mapping of imperiled species.</p>
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U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service



