Description: We searched for Pinyon Jay nests by hiking around the area, following birds, and looking into every tree we could. We observed the flock for many hours to determine where and when they were nesting.
Copyright Text: Johnson, K., N. Petersen, and J. Smith. 2021. Pinyon Jay Surveys at White Sands MIssile Range 2021 Final Report. Natural Heritage New Mexico Report #21-419. Biology Department University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Description: We searched for Pinyon Jay nests by hiking around the area, following birds, and looking into every tree we could. We observed the flock for many hours to determine where and when they were nesting.
Copyright Text: Johnson, K., N. Petersen, and J. Smith. 2021. Pinyon Jay Surveys at White Sands MIssile Range 2021 Final Report. Natural Heritage New Mexico Report #21-419. Biology Department University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Description: The Element Occurrence (EO) data are collected and maintained by the Natural Heritage New Mexico using a standardized methodology developed by NatureServe and the network of Natural Heritage Programs to provide accurate and current biodiversity and conservation information to public and private agencies and individuals. The primary emphasis is on species and ecological communities that are rare or otherwise imperiled. Uses of the data can include: natural resource management, conservation planning, environmental review, biological and ecological research, land acquisition, and economic development. Through aggregation of the EO data at regional, national, or range-wide scales, these data can be used to examine broad patterns and set priorities in a global context.
Copyright Text: Natural Heritage New Mexico, UNM Biology Dept. MSC03 2020 1 University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001 2016
Description: The corridor map was developed using the National Hydrology Dataset (NHD), the USFS Riparian Buffer Delineation Model V3.0 (Abood and Maclean 2012), soils maps from NRCS (2017) and USFS, digital elevation models (10-m DEMs), and aerial photo interpretation. Within U.S. Forest Service areas the corridor is defined by the USFS RMAP boundary developed from the Terrestrial Ecosystem Unit Inventory (TEUI) maps (Triepke et al. 2015). The New Mexico Riparian Corridor Map is available for download at https://nhnm.unm.edu/riparian/nmripmap. (This is the updated version that Jackie put together using Corrie's edits to the LPT (Lower Pecos Tularosa) portion. Corrie did those edits in December 2021. We will not post this updated version online until we finish editing the LPT habitat map. That might change the corridor again.)
Copyright Text: Muldavin, E., E. Milford, J. Leonard, J. Triepke, L. Elliot, P. Hanberry, D. Diamond, C. Reasner, Y. Chauvin, A. Urbanovsky, and J. Smith. 2020. New Mexico Riparian Habitat map NMRipMap. New Mexico Natural Heritage at the University of New Mexico, US Forest Service Region 3, Missouri Resource Assessment Partnership (MoRAP) at the University of Missouri, and Geospatial Technology and Applications Center (GTAC) of the US Forest Service, Salt Lake City, UT. Accessible at nhnm.unm.edu/riparian/nmripmap.
Description: The Element Occurrence (EO) data are collected and maintained by the Natural Heritage New Mexico using a standardized methodology developed by NatureServe and the network of Natural Heritage Programs to provide accurate and current biodiversity and conservation information to public and private agencies and individuals. The primary emphasis is on species and ecological communities that are rare or otherwise imperiled. Uses of the data can include: natural resource management, conservation planning, environmental review, biological and ecological research, land acquisition, and economic development. Through aggregation of the EO data at regional, national, or range-wide scales, these data can be used to examine broad patterns and set priorities in a global context.
Copyright Text: Natural Heritage New Mexico, UNM Biology Dept. MSC03 2020 1 University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001 2016
Description: The Element Occurrence (EO) data are collected and maintained by the Natural Heritage New Mexico using a standardized methodology developed by NatureServe and the network of Natural Heritage Programs to provide accurate and current biodiversity and conservation information to public and private agencies and individuals. The primary emphasis is on species and ecological communities that are rare or otherwise imperiled. Uses of the data can include: natural resource management, conservation planning, environmental review, biological and ecological research, land acquisition, and economic development. Through aggregation of the EO data at regional, national, or range-wide scales, these data can be used to examine broad patterns and set priorities in a global context.
Copyright Text: Natural Heritage New Mexico, UNM Biology Dept. MSC03 2020 1 University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001
Description: The Nevada Natural Heritage Program (NNHP) Database is both a manual and computerized library of the status and locations of Nevada's rare species. The NNHP includes in its data all federally and state listed plants and animals, all species that are candidates for listing, all species of concern, and those species that are considered sensitive by government agencies and the conservation community, as well as Watch list species. The computerized information is available for a fee in hardcopy and digital (GIS) forms. NNHP's data are housed in a dynamic database with information continually being added and updated. SENSITIVE LOCATIONS OMITTED: NNHP generally withholds precise locational data for taxa considered highly vulnerable to collecting, poaching, harassment, or vandalism. Generalized data for such occurrences are provided in printed form or in GIS format with "fuzzed" locational coordinates. The more precise data may be supplied on request if sufficient need can be demonstrated and confidentiality can be guaranteed to the satisfaction of NNHP.
Copyright Text: Nevada Natural Heritage Program Nevada Department of Conservation and Natural Resources 901 South Stewart Street, Suite 5002 Carson City, NV 89701-5244 (775) 684-2900 http://heritage.nv.gov