Evaluation of Biodiversity Value Based on Wildness: A Study of the Western Northwoods, Upper Great Lakes, USA

Regional conservation plans are developed and implemented to protect areas from human land uses that adversely affect biological diversity. Several different criteria have been used to identify locations with high biodiversity value; among these is "wildness." We evaluated the extent of wi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barry, C. R., Rooney, Thomas P., Ventura, S. J., Waller, Donald M.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: CORE Scholar 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/biology/72
id ftwrightuniv:oai:corescholar.libraries.wright.edu:biology-1071
record_format openpolar
spelling ftwrightuniv:oai:corescholar.libraries.wright.edu:biology-1071 2023-05-15T15:50:03+02:00 Evaluation of Biodiversity Value Based on Wildness: A Study of the Western Northwoods, Upper Great Lakes, USA Barry, C. R. Rooney, Thomas P. Ventura, S. J. Waller, Donald M. 2001-01-01T08:00:00Z https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/biology/72 unknown CORE Scholar https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/biology/72 Biological Sciences Faculty Publications Canis lupus Biology Life Sciences Medical Sciences Medicine and Health Sciences Systems Biology text 2001 ftwrightuniv 2021-11-21T09:51:41Z Regional conservation plans are developed and implemented to protect areas from human land uses that adversely affect biological diversity. Several different criteria have been used to identify locations with high biodiversity value; among these is "wildness." We evaluated the extent of wildness of the Upper Great Lakes region of the United States (the "Northwoods") to identify areas for inclusion in a regional conservation plan. Using a geographic information system to organize data, we evaluated wildness using six different data layers in raster format: land cover classification, forest cover type, land ownership, human population density, road density, and wolf (Canis lupus L.) habitat suitability. For each data layer, we quantified wildness (more vs. less wild) based on threshold criteria. We classified pixels within data layers as more wild if: (1) forest is present, (2) the forest has the same general species composition since European settlement, (3) the area is in public ownership, (4) human population density is < 1 person per km2, (5) road density is < 0.5 km of road per km2, and (6) the probability that wolves would colonize the area exceeds 75%. We found all these measures of wildness to be significantly associated with each other based on chi-square tests of independence (adjusted P ? 0.001). We created a new data layer by combining five existing layers (all except the wolf colonization layer) using an overlay procedure. This new layer shows a gradient of wildness across the region, with only 5.7% of all pixels meeting all five wildness criteria. The probability of wolves colonizing an area increases with its wildness. The methods we use to evaluate wildness here can be used in conjunction with other methods of regional biodiversity assessment to guide acquisition and easement efforts, zoning policies, and land management activities as opportunities arise. Text Canis lupus Wright State University: CORE Scholar (Campus Online Repository)
institution Open Polar
collection Wright State University: CORE Scholar (Campus Online Repository)
op_collection_id ftwrightuniv
language unknown
topic Canis lupus
Biology
Life Sciences
Medical Sciences
Medicine and Health Sciences
Systems Biology
spellingShingle Canis lupus
Biology
Life Sciences
Medical Sciences
Medicine and Health Sciences
Systems Biology
Barry, C. R.
Rooney, Thomas P.
Ventura, S. J.
Waller, Donald M.
Evaluation of Biodiversity Value Based on Wildness: A Study of the Western Northwoods, Upper Great Lakes, USA
topic_facet Canis lupus
Biology
Life Sciences
Medical Sciences
Medicine and Health Sciences
Systems Biology
description Regional conservation plans are developed and implemented to protect areas from human land uses that adversely affect biological diversity. Several different criteria have been used to identify locations with high biodiversity value; among these is "wildness." We evaluated the extent of wildness of the Upper Great Lakes region of the United States (the "Northwoods") to identify areas for inclusion in a regional conservation plan. Using a geographic information system to organize data, we evaluated wildness using six different data layers in raster format: land cover classification, forest cover type, land ownership, human population density, road density, and wolf (Canis lupus L.) habitat suitability. For each data layer, we quantified wildness (more vs. less wild) based on threshold criteria. We classified pixels within data layers as more wild if: (1) forest is present, (2) the forest has the same general species composition since European settlement, (3) the area is in public ownership, (4) human population density is < 1 person per km2, (5) road density is < 0.5 km of road per km2, and (6) the probability that wolves would colonize the area exceeds 75%. We found all these measures of wildness to be significantly associated with each other based on chi-square tests of independence (adjusted P ? 0.001). We created a new data layer by combining five existing layers (all except the wolf colonization layer) using an overlay procedure. This new layer shows a gradient of wildness across the region, with only 5.7% of all pixels meeting all five wildness criteria. The probability of wolves colonizing an area increases with its wildness. The methods we use to evaluate wildness here can be used in conjunction with other methods of regional biodiversity assessment to guide acquisition and easement efforts, zoning policies, and land management activities as opportunities arise.
format Text
author Barry, C. R.
Rooney, Thomas P.
Ventura, S. J.
Waller, Donald M.
author_facet Barry, C. R.
Rooney, Thomas P.
Ventura, S. J.
Waller, Donald M.
author_sort Barry, C. R.
title Evaluation of Biodiversity Value Based on Wildness: A Study of the Western Northwoods, Upper Great Lakes, USA
title_short Evaluation of Biodiversity Value Based on Wildness: A Study of the Western Northwoods, Upper Great Lakes, USA
title_full Evaluation of Biodiversity Value Based on Wildness: A Study of the Western Northwoods, Upper Great Lakes, USA
title_fullStr Evaluation of Biodiversity Value Based on Wildness: A Study of the Western Northwoods, Upper Great Lakes, USA
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Biodiversity Value Based on Wildness: A Study of the Western Northwoods, Upper Great Lakes, USA
title_sort evaluation of biodiversity value based on wildness: a study of the western northwoods, upper great lakes, usa
publisher CORE Scholar
publishDate 2001
url https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/biology/72
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_source Biological Sciences Faculty Publications
op_relation https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/biology/72
_version_ 1766385052087746560