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Greater sage-grouse population structure and connectivity data to inform the development of hierarchical population units (western United States)

We present five hierarchical demarcations of greater sage-grouse population structure, representing the spatial structure of populations which can exist due to differences in dispersal abilities, landscape configurations, and mating behavior. These demarcations represent Thiessen polygons of graph constructs (least-cost path [LCP] minimum spanning trees [MST; LCP-MST]) representing greater sage-grouse population structure. Because the graphs included locational information of sage-grouse breeding sites, we have provided polygons of the population structure. We also present two results using graph analytics representing node/connectivity importance based on our population structure. Understanding wildlife population structure and connectivity can help managers identify conservation strategies, as structure can facilitate the study of population changes and habitat connectivity can provide information on dispersal and biodiversity. We developed an approach to define hierarchical population structure (in other words, demarcation of subpopulations) using graph theory (in other words, connectivity) from an amalgamation of biological inferences encompassing dispersal capabilities based on movements and genetic flow, seasonal habitat conditions, and functional processes (for example, selection of habitat at multiple scales) affecting movements. We applied our approach to greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus), an upland gamebird species of conservation concern in western United States. We defined sage-grouse population structure by creating a cost surface, informed from functional processes of habitat characteristics to account for the resistance of inter-patch movements, and developing least-cost paths between breeding habitat sites (leks). The least-cost paths were combined into a multi-path graph construct for which we then used information on potential connectivity (dispersal distances) and functional connectivity (permeability of fragmented landscapes based on selection preferences) to decompose the graph into structures of subpopulations.

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Author(s) Michael O'Donnell orcid, David R Edmunds orcid, Cameron Aldridge orcid, Julie A Heinrichs orcid, Adrian P Monroe orcid, Peter S Coates orcid, Brian G Prochazka orcid, Steve Hanser orcid, Lief A Wiechman
Publication Date 2022-07-25
Beginning Date of Data 1950
Ending Date of Data 2019
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DOI https://doi.org/10.5066/P991D45Q
Citation O'Donnell, M., Edmunds, D.R., Aldridge, C., Heinrichs, J.A., Monroe, A.P., Coates, P.S., Prochazka, B.G., Hanser, S., and Wiechman, L.A., 2022, Greater sage-grouse population structure and connectivity data to inform the development of hierarchical population units (western United States): U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P991D45Q.
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Metadata Date 2022-07-25
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License http://www.usa.gov/publicdomain/label/1.0/
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Harvest Source: ScienceBase
Harvest Date: 2024-04-30T15:20:04.473Z