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Integrating single-species management and landscape conservation using regional habitat occurrence models: the northern goshawk in the Southwest,USA
Authors:Brett G Dickson  Thomas D Sisk  Steven E Sesnie  Richard T Reynolds  Steven S Rosenstock  Christina D Vojta  Michael F Ingraldi  Jill M Rundall
Institution:1. Lab of Landscape Ecology and Conservation Biology, Landscape Conservation Initiative, Northern Arizona University, P.O. Box 5694, Flagstaff, AZ, 86011, USA
2. Conservation Science Partners, Inc., Truckee, CA, 96161, USA
3. U.S.D.A. Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, 2150 Centre Ave. Bldg. A, Fort Collins, CO, 80526, USA
4. Arizona Game and Fish Department, Research Branch, 5000?W. Carefree Highway, Phoenix, AZ, 85086, USA
Abstract:Conservation planners and land managers are often confronted with scale-associated challenges when assessing the relationship between land management objectives and species conservation. Conservation of individual species typically involves site-level analyses of habitat, whereas land management focuses on larger spatial extents. New models are needed to more explicitly integrate species-specific conservation with landscape or regional scales. We address this challenge with an example using the northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis), a forest raptor with circumpolar distribution that is the focus of intense debate regarding forest management on public lands in the southwestern USA. To address goshawk-specific habitat conservation across a management area of 22,800-km2 in northern Arizona, we focused on the territory scale rather than individual nest sites. We compiled a 17-year database of 895 nest sites to estimate territory locations. We then estimated the likelihood of territory occurrence for the entire management area using multiple logistic regression within an expert-driven, spatially balanced, and information-theoretic framework. Our occurrence model incorporated forest structure variables that were derived from USFS Forest Inventory and Analysis plots and high-resolution satellite imagery. Results indicated that high canopy-bulk density, intermediate canopy-base heights, and low variation in tree density were strong predictors of territory occurrence. We used model-averaged parameter estimates for these variables to map and explore patterns of territory distribution across multiple land jurisdictions and ecological subregions. Our iterative modeling approach complements previous demographic studies in the region. It also provides a robust framework for integrating species conservation and landscape management in ongoing and future regional planning efforts.
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