Name: Longleaf Establishment - NC Forest Management Record
Display Field: LastName
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPoint
Description: Longleaf Establishment - NC Forest Management Record, North Carolina Forest Service:
Longleaf pine establishment records from North Carolina Forest Service since 1997.
Description: Primary Mills, North Carolina Forest Service, South Carolina Forestry Commission, Virginia Department of Forestry:
These companies produce renewable products by converting recently harvested trees to lumber, wood panels, paper, and many other forms of primary products.
Description: Longleaf Model Area, North Carolina Forest Service:
The model area is a 50 mile buffer around the historic longleaf pine range in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia.
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Description: Potential Historic Longleaf Pine Range:
An estimate of the range where longleaf pine occured in precolonial times.
Little, E.L., Jr. 1971. Atlas of United States trees, volume 1, conifers and important hardwoods. U.S. Department of Agriculture Miscellaneous Publication 1146, 9 p., 200 maps.
Description: Potential Historic Loblolly Pine Range:
An estimate of the range where loblolly pine occured in precolonial times.
Little, E.L., Jr. 1971. Atlas of United States trees, volume 1, conifers and important hardwoods. U.S. Department of Agriculture Miscellaneous Publication 1146, 9 p., 200 maps.
Description: Potential Historic Shortleaf Pine Range:
An estimate of the range where shortleaf pine occured in precolonial times.
Little, E.L., Jr. 1971. Atlas of United States trees, volume 1, conifers and important hardwoods. U.S. Department of Agriculture Miscellaneous Publication 1146, 9 p., 200 maps.
Name: Longleaf Primary Significant Geographic Areas (2011)
Display Field: GRIDCODE
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: Longleaf Primary Significant Geographic Areas, The Nature Conservancy:
The priority public lands identified in America’s Longleaf, several regional forest cover datasets, and large industrial forest land information (where available) were all used in conjunction with TNC chapter staff’s expertise to inform identification of TNC’s priorities. When available, additional state-specific data was also used.
Primary Significant Geographic Areas are the higher priority, centered on cores of high quality longleaf pine. These include, but are not restricted to, the federal areas identified in the Significant Geographic Areas of the Range-wide Conservation Plan. Other private and public high quality areas of at least 10,000 ac of longleaf systems form the cores of high priority polygons. We extended the priority polygons beyond the core areas to include nearby (often within 1000 m) additional blocks of longleaf or potential longleaf system that would buffer the cores, might be most efficiently restored, and increase the effective management of large blocks of this system.
Data Date: 2011
Name: Longleaf Secondary Significant Geographic Areas (2011)
Display Field: Id
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: Longleaf Secondary Significant Geographic Areas, The Nature Conservancy:
The priority public lands identified in America’s Longleaf, several regional forest cover datasets, and large industrial forest land information (where available) were all used in conjunction with TNC chapter staff’s expertise to inform identification of TNC’s priorities. When available, additional state-specific data was also used.
Areas identified as secondary priority are buffers and connectors that would require substantial restoration but would provide opportunity for increasing the connectivity of this system across its range. Areas within these boundaries would be pursued for protection and restoration if they achieve connection and/or protection of large blocks, but generally not if they are smaller, isolated parcels. Data Date: 2011
Description: Longleaf Occurences, NC Natural Heritage Program, Virginia Department of Forestry, South Carolina Forestry Commission.
Not a comprehensive record of existing longleaf pine.
Description: Natural Heritage Natural Areas, North Carolina Natural Heritage Program:
The Natural Heritage Program Natural Areas (NHPNA) data identifies terrestrial and aquatic sites that are of special biodiversity significance. A natural area's significance may be due to the presence of rare species, exemplary natural communities, or important animal assemblages. These conservation targets are referred to collectively as "elements" of biodiversity. The boundaries are drawn by North Carolina Natural Heritage Program (NCNHP) staff, based on field surveys conducted by NCNHP staff and other professional biologists. Conditions on the ground may have changed since the boundaries were drawn, and areas outside of boundaries do not necessarily fail to qualify for natural area status; they simply may not have been surveyed. Thus, the boundaries are considered approximate. The effects of a project on a natural area depend on the nature of the species or communities it contains and on the nature of the action being considered. Because the data can become outdated as conditions on the ground change, the North Carolina Natural Heritage Program should be consulted and field surveys should be conducted to verify conditions, before using the data in making land-use decisions. Please use the following format when acknowledging products derived from this data set:
North Carolina Natural Heritage Program. 2015. Biotics Database. Office of Conservation, Planning, and Community Affairs, Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Raleigh, North Carolina. While efforts have been made to ensure that these data are accurate and reliable, the North Carolina Natural Heritage Program cannot assume liability for any damages or misrepresentation caused by any inaccuracies in the data.
Data Date: July 2015.
Description: Managed Areas, North Carolina Natural Heritage Program, Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation - Natural Heritage, US Geological Survey Gap Analysis Program.
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