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Data from: Local government contribution to recovery of the giant gartersnake (Thamnophis gigas)

Data files

Aug 18, 2020 version files 16.69 MB

Abstract

Recovery of a threatened or endangered species usually requires conservation and mitigation actions at the local level across the species' entire range (i.e., geographic limits of a species' spatial distribution). Depending on the size of the range it could involve numerous or few jurisdictions. Under the federal Endangered Species Act an optional off-set program allows local governments to create a Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) to guide mitigative actions (streamlining permitting) and in the state of California this optionally can be complemented by a more robust program called a Natural Communities and Conservation Plan (NCCP). This project uses a case study of the giant gartersnake (GGS; Thamnophis gigas), a state and federally listed threatened endemic snake species in California’s Great Central Valley, to demonstrate various aspects of ‘contribution to recovery’ by each county government. ‘Recovery’ means raising the population of the species to levels that are sustainable over time and there are various ‘conservation standards’ associated with recovery planning: the jeopardy standard (with or without an HCP) and the recovery standard (with an HCP-NCCP). Using GIS technology, several spatial analyses were conducted to measure: (1) the number and density of known occurrences of the GGS in each county, (2) the percent of the GGS range contained by each county, (3) the percent of the range in each county that has an HCP, an HCP-NCCP, or no HCP, and (4) the percent of each recovery unit covered by an HCP, an HCP-NCCP, or no HCP. Results indicate that 22 counties cover the range of the GGS, however, 11 counties will be important contributors to recovery. More than half of the range (62%) of the GGS currently has a jeopardy standard covered by no HCPs, 24% of the range is covered by HCPs with a jeopardy standard, and just 14% has a recovery standard covered by an HCP-NCCP.