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This layer highlights Priority Wildlife Connectivity Areas in Oregon. Priority Wildlife Connectivity Areas (PWCAs) represent the parts of the landscape with the highest overall value for facilitating wildlife movement. This interconnected network of PWCAs was developed by extracting the top 1% of priority connectivity areas for all 54 OCAMP species and linking these areas using an optimal network analysis, with an emphasis on high-priority areas (i.e., the top 2% of priority areas were preferred over the top 3%, which were preferred over the top 4%, etc.) as well as climate refugia and permanent streams/riparian climate corridors. Habitat not included in PWCAs may still represent quality wildlife habitat, and may still have value for wildlife connectivity. PWCAs were not delineated within GAP Status 1 lands (Designated Wilderness Areas and Crater Lake National Park).
Each PWCA has a unique name referencing its general location in the state (by ecoregion), the PWCA type, and a numeric identifier. Ecoregions include the Coast Range (CR), Willamette Valley (WV), Klamath Mountains (KM), West Cascades (WC), East Cascades (EC), Columbia Plateau (CP), Blue Mountains (BM), and Northern Basin and Range (NBR). Priority Wildlife Connectivity Areas that straddle or cross two ecoregions are named based on both (e.g., CR/WV). The three types of PWCAs include Regions (R), Connectors (C), and Steppingstones (S).
Regions were delineated from the combined top 1% of priorities across all 54 surrogate species selected for the connectivity analysis. Regions are large, contiguous areas and represent the highest-value habitat for facilitating species movement throughout the state.
Connectors follow the optimal pathways between Regions. Connectors represent the best available habitat for facilitating movement from Region to Region. Connectors may pass through high-quality habitat in intact, relatively undisturbed parts of the landscape, as well as the best remaining marginal habitat in developed or degraded areas.
Steppingstones are individual or small groups of isolated hexagons within urban growth boundaries. Steppingstones represent remnant areas of intact habitat within otherwise developed landscapes that may help facilitate wildlife movement through urban areas.
For more detailed information on PWCAs and suggestions for conservation action to benefit wildlife connectivity within each PWCA, please see the PWCA web map: https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/6979b6598f904951bd0af1821e1595f1/
For more information on the methodology used to delineate PWCAs, please see the PWCA web page on the Oregon Conservation Strategy website:
https://oregonconservationstrategy.org/success-story/priority-wildlife-connectivity-areas-pwcas/
When a species is proposed for listing as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service must consider whether there are areas of habitat believed to be essential the species’ conservation. Those areas may be proposed for designation as “critical habitat.” Critical habitat is a term defined and used in the Act. It is a specific geographic area(s) that contains features essential for the conservation of a threatened or endangered species and that may require special management and protection. Critical habitat may include an area that is not currently occupied by the species but that will be needed for its recovery. An area is designated as “critical habitat” after the Service publishes a proposed Federal regulation in the Federal Register and receives and considers public comments on the proposal. The final boundaries of the critical habitat are also published in the Federal Register. Critical habitat are areas considered essential for the conservation of a listed species. Federal agencies are required to consult with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on actions they carry out, fund, or authorize to ensure that their actions will not destroy or adversely modify critical habitat. These areas provide notice to the public and land managers of the importance of these areas to the conservation of a listed species. Special protections and/or restrictions are possible in areas where Federal funding, permits, licenses, authorizations, or actions occur or are required.
", "connectionString": "url=https://services.arcgis.com/QVENGdaPbd4LUkLV/ArcGIS/rest/services/USFWS_Critical_Habitat/FeatureServer/1", "copyright": "U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service", "hasAttributionData": false, "serviceType": "Feature", "serviceFunction": "Operational", "baseMapGroup": null, "baseMapGroupIndex": "", "baseMapGroupIsMutuallyExclusive": false, "opacity": 1, "visible": false, "initiallyVisible": false, "drawingBehavior": "FeatureLayer", "iconUri": null, "includeInLayerList": false, "defaultAllowSymbolization": true, "isExpanded": true, "updateInterval": null, "dataProvider": null, "disableClientCaching": false, "serviceTag": "Mww4bPRE/0gOcvJXUW0ryMTbSrpd40XUCgY1mUMuVbQ=", "identifiable": null, "includeMosaicDatasetValues": null, "includeCatalogItems": null, "includeInLegend": null, "startTime": null, "endTime": null, "serverVersion": "11.2", "failureAction": "Ignore", "failureTimeout": null, "requestEncoding": null, "supportsDynamicLayers": false, "hasLayerCatalog": false, "autoSave": true, "color": null, "geometry": null, "objectIds": null, "onDemandCacheSize": null, "outFields": "*", "queryMode": "OnDemand", "tileHeight": null, "tileWidth": null, "selectionColor": null, "where": null, "editVerticesEnabled": true, "moveEnabled": true, "rotateEnabled": true, "scaleEnabled": true, "themeSettings": [], "layerHyperlinks": [], "tileInfo": {}, "instantSearch": false, "layers": [ { "id": "1", "name": "Critical Habitat - Linear Features - Final", "nativeID": "1", "displayName": "Critical Habitat - Linear Features", "description": "", "defaultVisibility": true, "featureType": "Line", "type": "DynamicFeatureLayer", "maxScale": 0, "minScale": 0, "visible": false, "initiallyVisible": false, "showMapTips": false, "identifiable": true, "queryable": true, "searchable": false, "supportsIdentify": true, "supportsQuery": true, "canCopyFeature": true, "snappable": true, "snappingEnabled": true, "hasAttachments": false, "featureZoomFactor": null, "featureZoomScale": null, "featureBorderColor": null, "featureBorderWidth": null, "featureFillColor": null, "showFeatureHyperlinks": "ShowAll", "iconUri": null, "includeInLayerList": true, "includeInLegend": true, "allowSymbolization": true, "legendUrl": null, "styleName": null, "drawIndex": null, "canToggleLabels": false, "showLabels": true, "dataProvider": null, "featureLabel": "{LayerDisplayName}", "featureDescription": "When a species is proposed for listing as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service must consider whether there are areas of habitat believed to be essential the species’ conservation. Those areas may be proposed for designation as “critical habitat.” Critical habitat is a term defined and used in the Act. It is a specific geographic area(s) that contains features essential for the conservation of a threatened or endangered species and that may require special management and protection. Critical habitat may include an area that is not currently occupied by the species but that will be needed for its recovery. An area is designated as “critical habitat” after the Service publishes a proposed Federal regulation in the Federal Register and receives and considers public comments on the proposal. The final boundaries of the critical habitat are also published in the Federal Register. Critical habitat are areas considered essential for the conservation of a listed species. Federal agencies are required to consult with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on actions they carry out, fund, or authorize to ensure that their actions will not destroy or adversely modify critical habitat. These areas provide notice to the public and land managers of the importance of these areas to the conservation of a listed species. Special protections and/or restrictions are possible in areas where Federal funding, permits, licenses, authorizations, or actions occur or are required.
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Cities:
Adams, Adrian, Albany, Amity, Antelope, Ashland, Astoria, Athena, Banks, Barlow, Bay City, Beaverton, Bend, Bonanza, Brookings, Brownsville, Burns, Butte Falls, Canby, Cannon Beach, Carlton, Cascade Locks, Cave Junction, Central Point, Chiloquin, Coburg, Columbia City, Coos Bay, Cornelius, Corvallis, Cottage Grove, Creswell, Culver, Damascus, Dayton, Detroit, Donald, Dufur, Dundee, Dunes City, Eagle Point, Echo, Estacada, Eugene, Fairview, Falls City, Florence, Forest Grove, Garibaldi, Gates, Gearhart, Gervais, Gladstone, Gold Beach, Gold Hill, Grants Pass, Grass Valley, Halsey, Happy Valley, Harrisburg, Helix, Hermiston, Hillsboro, Hines, Hood River, Hubbard, Idanha, Independence, Jacksonville, Jefferson, Johnson City, Jordan Valley, Junction City, Keizer, King City, Klamath Falls, La Pine, Lafayette, Lake Oswego, Lebanon, Lincoln City, Lowell, Lyons, Madras, Malin, Manzanita, Maupin, Maywood Park, McMinnville, Medford, Merrill, Metolius, Mill City, Millersburg, Milton-Freewater, Milwaukie, Molalla, Monmouth, Moro, Mosier, Mt. Angel, Myrtle Creek, Nehalem, Newberg, Newport, North Bend, North Plains, Nyssa, Oakridge, Ontario, Oregon City, Philomath, Phoenix, Pilot Rock, Portland, Port Orford, Prineville, Redmond, Reedsport, Rivergrove, Rockaway Beach, Rogue River, Rufus, Salem, Scappoose, Scio, Scotts Mills, Seaside, Shady Cove, Shaniko, Sheridan, Sherwood, Silverton, Sisters, Sodaville, Springfield, Stanfield, St. Helens, Stayton, Sublimity, Sweet Home, Talent, Tangent, The Dalles, Tigard, Tillamook, Troutdale, Tualatin, Turner, Ukiha, Umatilla, Vale, Veneta, Vernonia, Warrenton, Wasco, Waterloo, West Linn, Westfir, Weston, Wheeler, Willamina, Wilsonville, Winston, Wood Village, Woodburn, Yamhill.
Counties:
Baker County, Benton County, Clackamas County, Clatsop County, Columbia County, Coos County, Crook County, Curry County, Deschutes County, Douglas County, Harney County, Hood River County, Jackson County, Jefferson County, Josephine County, Klamath County, Lane County, Lincoln County, Linn County, Malheur County, Marion County, Multnomah County, Polk County, Sherman County, Tillamook County, Umatilla County, Union County, Wasco County, Washington County, Wheeler County, Yamhill County.
Cities added since the previous release:
Adams, Athena, Brookings, Coos Bay, Detroit, Echo, Gates, Gearhart, Gold Beach, Helix, Idanha, City of Jefferson, Lafayette, Lincoln City, Lyons, McMinnville, Milton-Freewater, Mt. Angel, Newport, North Bend, Pilot Rock, Port Orford, Reedsport, Scotts Mills, Seaside, Stanfield, Ukiah, City of Umatilla, Weston.
Several Cities and Counties have been updated since their first inclusion into the database. Those updates took place in late 2016 into early 2017 using the latest available data.
Cities: Albany, Ashland, Bend, Cave Junction, Central Point, Corvallis, Cottage Grove, Creswell, Dundee, Eagle Point, Eugene, Florence, Gold Hill, Grants Pass, Independence, Jacksonville, Junction City, La Pine, Lebanon, Medford, Cities within Metro, Mill City, Newburg, Oakridge, Philomath, Phoenix, Prineville, Redmond, Scio, Shady Cove, Sisters, Springfield, Stayton, Sweet Home, Talent, Tangent, Veneta.
Counties: Benton, Clackamas, Coos, Crook, Deschutes, Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Lane, Linn, Multnomah, Washington.
As of April 28, 2017 this feature class contains zoning data from 198local jurisdictions. DLCD plans to continue adding to and updating this statewide zoning dataset as they receive zoning information from the local jurisdictions. Jurisdictions included in the latest version of the statewide zoning geodatabase:
Cities:
Adams, Adrian, Albany, Amity, Antelope, Ashland, Astoria, Athena, Banks, Barlow, Bay City, Beaverton, Bend, Bonanza, Brookings, Brownsville, Burns, Butte Falls, Canby, Cannon Beach, Carlton, Cascade Locks, Cave Junction, Central Point, Chiloquin, Coburg, Columbia City, Coos Bay, Cornelius, Corvallis, Cottage Grove, Creswell, Culver, Damascus, Dayton, Detroit, Donald, Dufur, Dundee, Dunes City, Eagle Point, Echo, Estacada, Eugene, Fairview, Falls City, Florence, Forest Grove, Garibaldi, Gates, Gearhart, Gervais, Gladstone, Gold Beach, Gold Hill, Grants Pass, Grass Valley, Halsey, Happy Valley, Harrisburg, Helix, Hermiston, Hillsboro, Hines, Hood River, Hubbard, Idanha, Independence, Jacksonville, Jefferson, Johnson City, Jordan Valley, Junction City, Keizer, King City, Klamath Falls, La Pine, Lafayette, Lake Oswego, Lebanon, Lincoln City, Lowell, Lyons, Madras, Malin, Manzanita, Maupin, Maywood Park, McMinnville, Medford, Merrill, Metolius, Mill City, Millersburg, Milton-Freewater, Milwaukie, Molalla, Monmouth, Moro, Mosier, Mt. Angel, Myrtle Creek, Nehalem, Newberg, Newport, North Bend, North Plains, Nyssa, Oakridge, Ontario, Oregon City, Philomath, Phoenix, Pilot Rock, Portland, Port Orford, Prineville, Redmond, Reedsport, Rivergrove, Rockaway Beach, Rogue River, Rufus, Salem, Scappoose, Scio, Scotts Mills, Seaside, Shady Cove, Shaniko, Sheridan, Sherwood, Silverton, Sisters, Sodaville, Springfield, Stanfield, St. Helens, Stayton, Sublimity, Sweet Home, Talent, Tangent, The Dalles, Tigard, Tillamook, Troutdale, Tualatin, Turner, Ukiha, Umatilla, Vale, Veneta, Vernonia, Warrenton, Wasco, Waterloo, West Linn, Westfir, Weston, Wheeler, Willamina, Wilsonville, Winston, Wood Village, Woodburn, Yamhill.
Counties:
Baker County, Benton County, Clackamas County, Clatsop County, Columbia County, Coos County, Crook County, Curry County, Deschutes County, Douglas County, Harney County, Hood River County, Jackson County, Jefferson County, Josephine County, Klamath County, Lane County, Lincoln County, Linn County, Malheur County, Marion County, Multnomah County, Polk County, Sherman County, Tillamook County, Umatilla County, Union County, Wasco County, Washington County, Wheeler County, Yamhill County.
Cities added since the previous release:
Adams, Athena, Brookings, Coos Bay, Detroit, Echo, Gates, Gearhart, Gold Beach, Helix, Idanha, City of Jefferson, Lafayette, Lincoln City, Lyons, McMinnville, Milton-Freewater, Mt. Angel, Newport, North Bend, Pilot Rock, Port Orford, Reedsport, Scotts Mills, Seaside, Stanfield, Ukiah, City of Umatilla, Weston.
Several Cities and Counties have been updated since their first inclusion into the database. Those updates took place in late 2016 into early 2017 using the latest available data.
Cities: Albany, Ashland, Bend, Cave Junction, Central Point, Corvallis, Cottage Grove, Creswell, Dundee, Eagle Point, Eugene, Florence, Gold Hill, Grants Pass, Independence, Jacksonville, Junction City, La Pine, Lebanon, Medford, Cities within Metro, Mill City, Newburg, Oakridge, Philomath, Phoenix, Prineville, Redmond, Scio, Shady Cove, Sisters, Springfield, Stayton, Sweet Home, Talent, Tangent, Veneta.
Counties: Benton, Clackamas, Coos, Crook, Deschutes, Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Lane, Linn, Multnomah, Washington.
This map draws attention to your thematic content by providing a neutral background with minimal colors, labels, and features. Only key information is represented to provide geographic context, allowing your data to come to the foreground. This light gray map supports any strong colors, creating a visually compelling map graphic which helps your reader see the patterns intended. This map was developed by Esri using HERE data, Garmin basemap layers, OpenStreetMap contributors, the GIS user community, and Esri basemap data. Worldwide coverage is provided from Level 0 (1:591M scale) through Level 13 (1:72k scale). In North America (Canada, Mexico, United States), Europe, India, South America and Central America, Africa, most of the Middle east, and Australia & New Zealand coverage is provided from Level 14 (1:36k scale) through Level 16 (1:9k scale). For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/World_Light_Gray_Reference
This map draws attention to your thematic content by providing a neutral background with minimal colors, labels, and features. Only key information is represented to provide geographic context, allowing your data to come to the foreground. This light gray map supports any strong colors, creating a visually compelling map graphic which helps your reader see the patterns intended. This map was developed by Esri using HERE data, Garmin basemap layers, OpenStreetMap contributors, the GIS user community, and Esri basemap data. Worldwide coverage is provided from Level 0 (1:591M scale) through Level 13 (1:72k scale). In North America (Canada, Mexico, United States), Europe, India, South America and Central America, Africa, most of the Middle east, and Australia & New Zealand coverage is provided from Level 14 (1:36k scale) through Level 16 (1:9k scale). For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/World_Light_Gray_Reference
This map draws attention to your thematic content by providing a neutral background with minimal colors, labels, and features. Only key information is represented to provide geographic context, allowing your data to come to the foreground. This light gray map supports any strong colors, creating a visually compelling map graphic which helps your reader see the patterns intended. This map was developed by Esri using HERE data, Garmin basemap layers, OpenStreetMap contributors, Esri basemap data, and select data from the GIS user community. Worldwide coverage is provided from Level 0 (1:591M scale) through Level 13 (1:72k scale). In North America (Canada, Mexico, United States), Europe, India, South America and Central America, Africa, most of the Middle east, and Australia & New Zealand coverage is provided from Level 14 (1:36k scale) through Level 16 (1:9k scale). For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/World_Light_Gray_Base
This map is designed to be used as a general reference map for informational and educational purposes as well as a base map by GIS professionals and other users for creating web maps and web mapping applications. The map was developed by National Geographic and Esri and reflects the distinctive National Geographic cartographic style in a multi-scale reference map of the world. The map was authored using data from a variety of leading data providers, including Garmin, HERE, UNEP-WCMC, NASA, ESA, USGS, and others. This reference map includes administrative boundaries, cities, protected areas, highways, roads, railways, water features, buildings and landmarks, overlaid on shaded relief and land cover imagery for added context. The map currently includes global coverage down to ~1:144k scale and more detailed coverage for North America down to ~1:9k scale. For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/NatGeo_World_Map
This map is designed to be used as a general reference map for informational and educational purposes as well as a base map by GIS professionals and other users for creating web maps and web mapping applications. The map was developed by National Geographic and Esri and reflects the distinctive National Geographic cartographic style in a multi-scale reference map of the world. The map was authored using data from a variety of leading data providers, including Garmin, HERE, UNEP-WCMC, NASA, ESA, USGS, and others. This reference map includes administrative boundaries, cities, protected areas, highways, roads, railways, water features, buildings and landmarks, overlaid on shaded relief and land cover imagery for added context. The map currently includes global coverage down to ~1:144k scale and more detailed coverage for North America down to ~1:9k scale. For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/NatGeo_World_Map
This map portrays surface elevation as shaded relief. This map is used as a basemap layer to add shaded relief to other GIS maps, such as the ArcGIS Online World Street Map. It is especially useful in maps that do not contain orthoimagery. The map resolution (cell size) is as follows: 30 Meters for the U.S. 90 Meters for all land areas between 60° north and 56° south latitude. 1 KM resolution above 60° north and 56° south. The shaded relief imagery was developed by Esri using GTOPO30, Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM), and National Elevation Data (NED) data from the USGS. For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/World_Shaded_Relief
This map portrays surface elevation as shaded relief. This map is used as a basemap layer to add shaded relief to other GIS maps, such as the ArcGIS Online World Street Map. It is especially useful in maps that do not contain orthoimagery. The map resolution (cell size) is as follows: 30 Meters for the U.S. 90 Meters for all land areas between 60° north and 56° south latitude. 1 KM resolution above 60° north and 56° south. The shaded relief imagery was developed by Esri using GTOPO30, Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM), and National Elevation Data (NED) data from the USGS. For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/World_Shaded_Relief
This map presents land cover imagery for the world and detailed topographic maps for the United States. The map includes the National Park Service (NPS) Natural Earth physical map at 1.24km per pixel for the world at small scales, i-cubed eTOPO 1:250,000-scale maps for the contiguous United States at medium scales, and National Geographic TOPO! 1:100,000 and 1:24,000-scale maps (1:250,000 and 1:63,000 in Alaska) for the United States at large scales. The TOPO! maps are seamless, scanned images of United States Geological Survey (USGS) paper topographic maps. For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/USA_Topo_Maps
This map presents land cover imagery for the world and detailed topographic maps for the United States. The map includes the National Park Service (NPS) Natural Earth physical map at 1.24km per pixel for the world at small scales, i-cubed eTOPO 1:250,000-scale maps for the contiguous United States at medium scales, and National Geographic TOPO! 1:100,000 and 1:24,000-scale maps (1:250,000 and 1:63,000 in Alaska) for the United States at large scales. The TOPO! maps are seamless, scanned images of United States Geological Survey (USGS) paper topographic maps. For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/USA_Topo_Maps
This map is designed to be used as a basemap by GIS professionals and as a reference map by anyone. The map includes administrative boundaries, cities, water features, physiographic features, parks, landmarks, highways, roads, railways, and airports overlaid on land cover and shaded relief imagery for added context. The map provides coverage for the world down to a scale of ~1:72k. Coverage is provided down to ~1:4k for the following areas: Australia and New Zealand; India; Europe; Canada; Mexico; the continental United States and Hawaii; South America and Central America; Africa; and most of the Middle East. Coverage down to ~1:1k and ~1:2k is available in select urban areas. This basemap was compiled from a variety of best available sources from several data providers, including the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), U.S. National Park Service (NPS), Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Department of Natural Resources Canada (NRCAN), GeoBase, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Garmin, HERE, Esri, OpenStreetMap contributors, and the GIS User Community. For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/World_Topo_Map
This map is designed to be used as a basemap by GIS professionals and as a reference map by anyone. The map includes administrative boundaries, cities, water features, physiographic features, parks, landmarks, highways, roads, railways, and airports overlaid on land cover and shaded relief imagery for added context. The map provides coverage for the world down to a scale of ~1:72k. Coverage is provided down to ~1:4k for the following areas: Australia and New Zealand; India; Europe; Canada; Mexico; the continental United States and Hawaii; South America and Central America; Africa; and most of the Middle East. Coverage down to ~1:1k and ~1:2k is available in select urban areas. This basemap was compiled from a variety of best available sources from several data providers, including the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), U.S. National Park Service (NPS), Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), Department of Natural Resources Canada (NRCAN), GeoBase, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Garmin, HERE, Esri, OpenStreetMap contributors, and the GIS User Community. For more information on this map, including our terms of use, visit us online at https://goto.arcgisonline.com/maps/World_Topo_Map