Determining habitat suitability for the western gray squirrel and eastern gray squirrel in California| Predicting future ranges with Maxent and ArcGIS

<p> The main goals of this study were to map the current distribution of the invasive eastern gray squirrel in California as of 2016, to project the potential future geographic range of the species, and to identify areas where the future range of the eastern gray squirrel is likely to overlap...

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Main Author: Creley, Carly McKean
Language:EN
Published: California State University, Los Angeles 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10141053
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-101410532016-07-28T16:03:06Z Determining habitat suitability for the western gray squirrel and eastern gray squirrel in California| Predicting future ranges with Maxent and ArcGIS Creley, Carly McKean Wildlife conservation|Environmental science <p> The main goals of this study were to map the current distribution of the invasive eastern gray squirrel in California as of 2016, to project the potential future geographic range of the species, and to identify areas where the future range of the eastern gray squirrel is likely to overlap the range of the native western gray squirrel. Location data were obtained from museum specimens, wildlife rehabilitation centers, a roadkill database, and research-grade citizen observations. Ecological niche models were created with Maxent, while range and habitat suitability maps were produced with ArcGIS software. Populations of eastern gray squirrels are currently concentrated around Sacramento, the San Francisco Bay, Monterey, and Bellota. The highest priority areas for control and eradication are areas of western gray squirrel habitat near existing eastern gray squirrel populations, including both peninsulas of the San Francisco Bay, areas near Santa Cruz, Oakland, Santa Rosa, and the Monterey Peninsula.</p> California State University, Los Angeles 2016-07-26 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10141053 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Wildlife conservation|Environmental science
spellingShingle Wildlife conservation|Environmental science
Creley, Carly McKean
Determining habitat suitability for the western gray squirrel and eastern gray squirrel in California| Predicting future ranges with Maxent and ArcGIS
description <p> The main goals of this study were to map the current distribution of the invasive eastern gray squirrel in California as of 2016, to project the potential future geographic range of the species, and to identify areas where the future range of the eastern gray squirrel is likely to overlap the range of the native western gray squirrel. Location data were obtained from museum specimens, wildlife rehabilitation centers, a roadkill database, and research-grade citizen observations. Ecological niche models were created with Maxent, while range and habitat suitability maps were produced with ArcGIS software. Populations of eastern gray squirrels are currently concentrated around Sacramento, the San Francisco Bay, Monterey, and Bellota. The highest priority areas for control and eradication are areas of western gray squirrel habitat near existing eastern gray squirrel populations, including both peninsulas of the San Francisco Bay, areas near Santa Cruz, Oakland, Santa Rosa, and the Monterey Peninsula.</p>
author Creley, Carly McKean
author_facet Creley, Carly McKean
author_sort Creley, Carly McKean
title Determining habitat suitability for the western gray squirrel and eastern gray squirrel in California| Predicting future ranges with Maxent and ArcGIS
title_short Determining habitat suitability for the western gray squirrel and eastern gray squirrel in California| Predicting future ranges with Maxent and ArcGIS
title_full Determining habitat suitability for the western gray squirrel and eastern gray squirrel in California| Predicting future ranges with Maxent and ArcGIS
title_fullStr Determining habitat suitability for the western gray squirrel and eastern gray squirrel in California| Predicting future ranges with Maxent and ArcGIS
title_full_unstemmed Determining habitat suitability for the western gray squirrel and eastern gray squirrel in California| Predicting future ranges with Maxent and ArcGIS
title_sort determining habitat suitability for the western gray squirrel and eastern gray squirrel in california| predicting future ranges with maxent and arcgis
publisher California State University, Los Angeles
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10141053
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