Patterns of Aquatic Species Imperilment in the Southern Appalachians: An Evaluation of Regional Databases |
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Authors: | Patricia A Flebbe James A Herrig |
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Institution: | (1) Southern Research Station, U.S. Forest Service, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences, Virginia Tech, Mail Code 0321, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, USA , US;(2) Cherokee National Forest, U.S. Forest Service, P.O. Box 2010, Cleveland, Tennessee 37320, USA , US |
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Abstract: | / For regional analyses of species imperilment patterns, data on species distributions are available from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and from the state heritage programs. We compared these two different databases as sources of best available information for regional analyses of patterns of aquatic species imperilment for 132 counties in the southern Appalachians and examined patterns produced from the databases. The heritage program database contained information about a greater number of imperiled species because species need not be federally listed as threatened or endangered to be included in this database. In the southern Appalachians, about half of imperiled molluscs and about one-fourth of imperiled fish were listed as threatened or endangered; much smaller proportions of other taxonomic groups were federally listed. Most threatened and endangered species appeared on both lists, but for about 40% of the species inconsistencies exist, notably a lack of recent records in the heritage program dataset. Numbers of species in each county were significantly different between the two datasets for Georgia, Tennessee, and Virginia, where the largest number of threatened and endangered species reside. Nevertheless, some counties always appeared as centers of imperilment, and the general spatial patterns of imperilment were similar. |
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Keywords: | : Aquatic species Fish Molluscs Species imperilment Hot spots Southern Appalachians Regional analysis |
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