Grouping and Prioritizing Natural Communities for the San Diego Multiple Species Conservation Program

Type: report

Article abstract: Prioritization of communities for monitoring was based on the following criteria: representativeness, extent, fragmentation, endangerment and threats. Aggregated communities that received high priority rankings based on several criteria include CSS and meadows & freshwater wetlands. Communities with high endangerment or threats should also receive high priority and include: Southern foredunes, Southern coastal salt marsh, Southern coastal bluff scrub, Maritime succulent scrub, Diegan coastal sage scrub, Southern maritime chaparral, Valley needlegrass grassland, Cismontane alkali marsh, Southern arroyo willow riparian forest, Southern willow scrub, Engelmann oak woodland, Torrey Pine forest, and Tecate Cypress forest. This report will: describe the current state of the MSCP Preserve, discuss natural community assemblages and alternative vegetation community classifications for the MSCP, describe the use of landscape stratification based on environmental variables as an alternative to vegetation classification, discuss the grouping of communities for the monitoring program, and prioritize natural communities for monitoring protocol development.

Number of pages: 57

Authors: Franklin, Janet; Hierl, Lauren; Deutschman, Douglas; Regan, Helen;

Year: 2006

Purpose: Prioritization of communities for monitoring through a spatial analysis of mapped plant communities and physical landscape variables in the MSCP Region, the planned conservation area and the currently conserved lands.

Prepared for: California Department of Fish and Wildlife;

Prepared by: San Diego State University, Department of Biology;

Keywords: analysis of plans and recommendations; endangered species; landscape patterns; MSCP; plant communities; prioritization; San Diego;

Projects: