Each year the State of the Birds report focuses attention on conservation issues that impact bird populations in the United States. In the 2011 report, bird distribution and land-ownership data provided the nation with an assessment of the status of birds on public lands and waters. These types of assessments are important not only because they demonstrate the importance public lands have in conserving birds; but also because they show stewardship opportunities available for the public land agencies managing these lands.
State of the Birds partnership
This year’s report was developed by the North American Bird Conservation Initiative in partnership with The National Gap Analysis Program at the University of Idaho, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, The Nature Conservancy, American Bird Conservancy, Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Geological Survey, Department of Defense/DoD Partners in Flight, Klamath Bird Observatory, National Audubon Society, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and USDA Forest Service.
Contributions by GAP
GAP’s Protected Areas Database of the United States (PAD-US version 1.1) was used to determine land ownership and biodiversity protection status of all public lands for the continental U.S., Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
GAP’s National Land Cover data were used to estimate the extent of each primary habitat within public lands. The 590 ecological systems and land-use classes were categorized into primary habitat designations for the analysis. These data were then overlaid with PAD-US to calculate the area of each primary habitat on public lands (not including coasts, islands, and oceans).
To calculate the percentage of each species’ distribution within public land ownership and biodiversity protection categories for the continental U.S., the bird distribution model or frequency map for each bird species was projected onto PAD-US. By combining these datasets, analysts calculated the percentages of species distributions on public lands and identified public agencies responsible for managing lands where each species occurred.
PAD-US version 1.1 included significant contributions and large aggregated data sets from BLM, USFS, GreenInfo Network, and The Nature Conservancy. USGS-GAP relies on authoritative sources, such as federal, state, local, nongovernmental organizations, and land trusts to provide valuable spatial and attribute data to improve and expand PAD-US. We encourage agencies and organizations with protected areas data to contact USGS-GAP. PAD-U.S. 1.2, the newest update, is now available for download.
Visit the State of the Birds website