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Hierarchically nested and biologically relevant range-wide monitoring frameworks for greater sage-grouse, western United States

We produced 13 hierarchically nested cluster levels that reflect the results from developing a hierarchical monitoring framework for greater sage-grouse across the western United States. Polygons (clusters) within each cluster level group a population of sage-grouse leks (sage-grouse breeding grounds) and each level increasingly groups lek clusters from previous levels. We developed the hierarchical clustering approach by identifying biologically relevant population units aimed to use a statistical and repeatable approach and include biologically relevant landscape and habitat characteristics. We desired a framework that was spatially hierarchical, discretized the landscape while capturing connectivity (habitat and movements), and supported management questions at different spatial scales. The spatial variability in the amount and quality of habitat resources can affect local population success and result in different population growth rates among smaller clusters. Equally so, the spatial structure and ecological organization driving scale-dependent systems in a fragmented landscape affects dispersal behavior, suggesting inclusion in population monitoring frameworks. Studies that compare conditions among spatially explicit hierarchical clusters may elucidate the cause of differing growth rates at local scales affected by changes in habitat quality compared to larger scaled processes affecting growth rates, such as regional climate/vegetation communities. Therefore, the use of multiple scales (hierarchical cluster levels) that group demographic data can provide information driving population changes at different spatial scales, thereby providing a tool for population monitoring and adaptive management.

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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 2022-12-01
Beginning Date of Data 2019
Ending Date of Data 2019
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DOI https://doi.org/10.5066/P9D1K0LX
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, Hierarchically nested and biologically relevant range-wide monitoring frameworks for greater sage-grouse, western United States: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9D1K0LX.
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Metadata Date 2022-12-01
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Harvest Source: ScienceBase
Harvest Date: 2022-12-02T04:43:05.339Z