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Citywide_Wildlife_Connectivity (Map Service)


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Current Version: 10.81

Service Description:

The Citywide Wildlife Connectivity Layer is a raster layer that shows the wildlife connectivity of all landscapes across the City of LA. This layer is based on a 30ft resolution raster layer, but was aggregated using the Block Statistics tool to adjust the resolution to represent a more realistic outcome. Thus, it appears to be at a lower than 30ft resolution. This is the first published assessment of high-resolution wall-to-wall connectivity data for the City of Los Angeles. 


This layer was created using Omniscape, modeling software that produces maps of omni-directional habitat connectivity. Omniscape relies on two inputs: a source layer and a resistance layer.  LASAN used the Urban Habitat Quality layer as the source data and the Wildlife Movement Resistance layer as the resistance layer. Omniscape uses circuit theory to assess movement pathways, taking into account features, like roads, that serve as barriers to wildlife movement.  Staff followed the methodology described in McRae et al. (2016) to calculate the normalized current flow and define scoring categories.  Every pixel across the City was classified as an impermeable barrier, impeded, pinch-point, channeled, or diffuse, with impermeable barriers exhibiting extremely limited potential for connectivity, and diffuse areas, being the best, most desirable conditions for unrestricted wildlife movement and habitat connectivity.


Classification

Description

Raw Values

Score

Impermeable barrier

Areas with features that severely restrict wildlife movement movement (e.g., freeways, major roads)

<0.4

0

Impeded

Areas with restricted  movement (e.g., roads, highly urban landscapes)

0.4-0.8

1

Pinch-points

Bottlenecks where further habitat loss could restrict movement

>2

2

Channeled

Bottlenecks that allow concentrated wildlife movement 

1.6-2

3

Intensified

Areas that serve as important linkages for wildlife movement 

1.2-1.6

4

Diffuse

Areas where movement is unrestricted

0.8-1.2

5



See the information on metric 1.1e in the LA Biodiversity Index Baseline Report for more information.




The Urban Habitat Quality layer and the Wildlife Movement Resistance layer were created by Dr. Isaac Brown.  The Omniscape modeling showcased here was performed by LASAN staff (Peggy Nguyen and Michelle Barton).  Special thanks to GIS staff from the Department of City Planning for providing valuable guidance throughout the effort.   




Map Name: Layers

Legend

All Layers and Tables

Layers: Description:

The Citywide Wildlife Connectivity Layer is a raster layer that shows the wildlife connectivity of all landscapes across the City of LA. This layer is based on a 30ft resolution raster layer, but was aggregated using the Block Statistics tool to adjust the resolution to represent a more realistic outcome. Thus, it appears to be at a lower than 30ft resolution. This is the first published assessment of high-resolution wall-to-wall connectivity data for the City of Los Angeles. 


This layer was created using Omniscape, modeling software that produces maps of omni-directional habitat connectivity. Omniscape relies on two inputs: a source layer and a resistance layer.  LASAN used the Urban Habitat Quality layer as the source data and the Wildlife Movement Resistance layer as the resistance layer. Omniscape uses circuit theory to assess movement pathways, taking into account features, like roads, that serve as barriers to wildlife movement.  Staff followed the methodology described in McRae et al. (2016) to calculate the normalized current flow and define scoring categories.  Every pixel across the City was classified as an impermeable barrier, impeded, pinch-point, channeled, or diffuse, with impermeable barriers exhibiting extremely limited potential for connectivity, and diffuse areas, being the best, most desirable conditions for unrestricted wildlife movement and habitat connectivity.


Classification

Description

Raw Values

Score

Impermeable barrier

Areas with features that severely restrict wildlife movement movement (e.g., freeways, major roads)

<0.4

0

Impeded

Areas with restricted  movement (e.g., roads, highly urban landscapes)

0.4-0.8

1

Pinch-points

Bottlenecks where further habitat loss could restrict movement

>2

2

Channeled

Bottlenecks that allow concentrated wildlife movement 

1.6-2

3

Intensified

Areas that serve as important linkages for wildlife movement 

1.2-1.6

4

Diffuse

Areas where movement is unrestricted

0.8-1.2

5



See the information on metric 1.1e in the LA Biodiversity Index Baseline Report for more information.




The Urban Habitat Quality layer and the Wildlife Movement Resistance layer were created by Dr. Isaac Brown.  The Omniscape modeling showcased here was performed by LASAN staff (Peggy Nguyen and Michelle Barton).  Special thanks to GIS staff from the Department of City Planning for providing valuable guidance throughout the effort.   




Copyright Text: Isaac Brown, City of Los Angeles, LASAN, Department of City Planning

Spatial Reference:
102100

Single Fused Map Cache: true

Capabilities: Map,TilesOnly,Tilemap

Tile Info:
Initial Extent:
Full Extent:
Min Scale: 0.0
Max Scale: 0.0

Min LOD: 11
Max LOD: 15

Units: esriMeters

Supported Image Format Types: MIXED

Export Tiles Allowed: false
Max Export Tiles Count: 100000

Resampling: true

Document Info: