FWS ACJV ME sparrow counts 2011 [U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service] {2020}
Description
https://www.tidalmarshbirds.org/ SHARP - With partners in governmental agencies, conservation non-profits, academic organizations, and private citizens, we support the science behind tidal marsh bird conservation. We answer the questions needed to prevent tidal marsh birds and their wetland habitats from vanishing.We ask that you please acknowledge SHARP in all uses of these data, and if your use represents a substantial portionofa particular publication, please consider reaching out to theSHARP Principal Investigatorsfor ourgreaterinvolvement and potential authorship. 1994 - 2012 Tidal marsh bird survey database (max counts)SHARP Bird Surveys (1994-2012) - Public Release: 22Oct2015 (417 downloads)(data, metadata, and database contact information)This database contains compiled data from 11 contributing organizations (see metadata) that conducted avian point counts between 1994 - 2012 within wetlands designated asE2EM (Estuarine Emergent Wetland-i.e., tidal salt marsh) by theNational Wetland Inventory. Each row indicates the maximum count of individuals of eachspecies detected at apoint for a particular year. Detections for our five focal species (Saltmarsh Sparrow, Seaside Sparrow, Nelson's Sparrow, Willet, and Clapper Rail) are included in this database.Requested citation for field and analytical methods:Correll, MD, WA Wiest, TP Hodgman, WG Shriver, CS Elphick, BJ McGill, KM O'Brien, BJ Olsen. 2017.Predictors of specialist avifaunal decline in coastal marshes. Conservation Biology 31(1):172-182. https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.12797.Requested citation for full database:SHARP 2015. "Specialist-bird survey database: 1994-2012".Saltmarsh Habitat and Avian Research Program. https://www.tidalmarshbirds.org.
Department of the Interior (2021). FWS ACJV ME sparrow counts 2011 [U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service] {2020}. . https://gis-fws.opendata.arcgis.com/maps/fws::fws-acjv-me-sparrow-counts-2011-2020 (web service)