Item talk:Q318366
From geokb
{
"DOI": { "doi": "10.5066/p9sco7an", "identifiers": [], "creators": [ { "name": "Colleen M Handel", "nameType": "Personal", "affiliation": [ "United States Geological Survey" ], "nameIdentifiers": [ { "schemeUri": "https://orcid.org", "nameIdentifier": "https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0267-7408", "nameIdentifierScheme": "ORCID" } ] }, { "name": "Lisa Pajot", "nameType": "Personal", "affiliation": [], "nameIdentifiers": [ { "schemeUri": "https://orcid.org", "nameIdentifier": "https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5704-2381", "nameIdentifierScheme": "ORCID" } ] }, { "name": "Steven M Matsuoka", "nameType": "Personal", "affiliation": [ "United States Geological Survey" ], "nameIdentifiers": [ { "schemeUri": "https://orcid.org", "nameIdentifier": "https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6415-1885", "nameIdentifierScheme": "ORCID" } ] } ], "titles": [ { "title": "Alaska Landbird Monitoring Survey Dataset" } ], "publisher": "U.S. Geological Survey", "container": {}, "publicationYear": 2024, "subjects": [ { "subject": "Wildlife" }, { "subject": "Ecology" }, { "subject": "FOS: Biological sciences", "schemeUri": "http://www.oecd.org/science/inno/38235147.pdf", "subjectScheme": "Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)" }, { "subject": "Birds" }, { "subject": "Migratory birds" }, { "subject": "Biogeography" }, { "subject": "Habitats" }, { "subject": "Field inventory and monitoring" }, { "subject": "Ornithology" }, { "subject": "Terrestrial ecosystems" }, { "subject": "Animals/vertebrates" }, { "subject": "Alaska" }, { "subject": "Animal and plant census" }, { "subject": "Spatial distribution" }, { "subject": "Cranes and allies" }, { "subject": "Ducks/geese/swans" }, { "subject": "Eagle/falcons/hawks and allies" }, { "subject": "Grebes" }, { "subject": "Herons/egrets and allies" }, { "subject": "Loons" }, { "subject": "Perching Birds" }, { "subject": "Sandpipers" }, { "subject": "Waders/gulls/auks and allies" }, { "subject": "Biodiversity" }, { "subject": "Resident birds" }, { "subject": "Environmental conditions" }, { "subject": "Detection distance" }, { "subject": "Bird behavior" }, { "subject": "Alaska Peninsula" }, { "subject": "Arctic National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson" }, { "subject": "Kanuti National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "Admiralty Island" }, { "subject": "Copper River Census Area" }, { "subject": "East Fork Skagway River" }, { "subject": "Fairbanks North Star Borough" }, { "subject": "Fort Greely" }, { "subject": "Koyukuk River" }, { "subject": "Mitkof Island" }, { "subject": "Natlaratlen River" }, { "subject": "North Slope Borough" }, { "subject": "Taku Glacier" }, { "subject": "Mount Fairplay" }, { "subject": "Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "Alaska Peninsula National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "Andreafsky Wilderness" }, { "subject": "Chugach National Forest" }, { "subject": "Chugach State Park" }, { "subject": "Copper River Delta Fish and Wildlife Management Area" }, { "subject": "Denali National Park and Preserve" }, { "subject": "Denali State Park" }, { "subject": "Innoko National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "James Dalton Mountain" }, { "subject": "Kenai Wilderness" }, { "subject": "Klondike Gold Rush National Historic Park" }, { "subject": "Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "Koyukuk National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska" }, { "subject": "Nowitna National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "Selawik National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "South Baranof Wilderness" }, { "subject": "Tetlin National Wildlife Refuge" }, { "subject": "Tongass National Forest" }, { "subject": "Tracy Arm-Fords Terror Wilderness" } ], "contributors": [], "dates": [ { "date": "2024-04-27", "dateType": "Available" }, { "date": "2002/2022", "dateType": "Collected" } ], "language": null, "types": { "ris": "DATA", "bibtex": "misc", "citeproc": "dataset", "schemaOrg": "Dataset", "resourceType": "Dataset", "resourceTypeGeneral": "Dataset" }, "relatedIdentifiers": [ { "relationType": "IsCitedBy", "relatedIdentifier": "https://doi.org/10.1650/CONDOR-17-67.1", "relatedIdentifierType": "DOI" } ], "relatedItems": [], "sizes": [], "formats": [], "version": null, "rightsList": [ { "rights": "Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal", "rightsUri": "https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode", "schemeUri": "https://spdx.org/licenses/", "rightsIdentifier": "cc0-1.0", "rightsIdentifierScheme": "SPDX" } ], "descriptions": [ { "description": "Boreal Partners in Flight developed the Alaska Landbird Monitoring Survey (ALMS) primarily to monitor breeding populations of landbirds in the vast off-road areas of Alaska in conjunction with data collected from the roadside North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS). ALMS is a collaborative program in which agencies and other entities conduct standardized surveys of breeding birds and their habitats on the lands they manage and then provide the data to the U.S. Geological Survey Alaska Science Center for analysis and archiving. The ALMS monitoring program comprises a set of survey blocks that have been selected in a stratified-random design primarily across state and Federal natural resource lands in Alaska with the principal goal of assessing regional and statewide population trends of birds during the breeding season (Handel and Sauer 2017). Each block has a mini-grid of 15\u221225 points that are typically surveyed biennially, with half of the blocks surveyed in alternating years. This sampling frame has been augmented with a set of 34 transects or mini-grids, each comprising 12\u201228 points, that had previously been established for monitoring on some of these public resource lands and that were suitable for including in the sampling frame for trend estimates. This dataset has been further augmented with data from other non-random locations within Alaska that were collected following the same survey protocol but used for other purposes, such as inventories and specialized studies. At each point within all sampling units, a 10-min point count is conducted by a highly skilled observer, who identifies and records all birds detected. The distance from the observer to the bird and the time at which each bird is observed are recorded in prescribed distance and time intervals for each observation so that densities can be estimated by correcting for detection probability. Observers collect corresponding habitat data during the first visit and at subsequent 10-year intervals or whenever a disturbance (e.g., fire, wind) has caused a significant change. Habitat data will be available in a separate USGS data release.", "descriptionType": "Abstract" } ], "geoLocations": [], "fundingReferences": [], "url": "https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/662a8dd1d34ea70bd5f0acf0", "contentUrl": null, "metadataVersion": 3, "schemaVersion": "http://datacite.org/schema/kernel-4", "source": "api", "isActive": true, "state": "findable", "reason": null, "viewCount": 0, "downloadCount": 0, "referenceCount": 0, "citationCount": 1, "partCount": 0, "partOfCount": 0, "versionCount": 0, "versionOfCount": 0, "created": "2024-04-26T18:27:45Z", "registered": "2024-04-26T18:27:45Z", "published": null, "updated": "2024-07-18T17:38:07Z" }
}