Name: Oak Grasses 2005
Display Field: COVER_DESC
Type: Feature Layer
Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolygon
Description: INTRODUCTION
The objective of this project, covering the Puget Lowland and Willamette Valley ecoregions within Washington state, was to create a unified digital map of: (1) untilled grasslands now existing in landscapes that formerly supported native dry grasslands, and (2) oak dominated or co-dominated canopies. The map’s scale and level of detail are designed to be appropriate for both regional-level conservation planning and county-level planning and development screening. Native grasslands and oak woodlands are some of the most imperiled ecosystems in western Washington (Dunn and Ewing 1997). For example, native grasslands in the south Puget Sound area have declined to less than 3% of their pre-settlement areal extent (Crawford and Hall 1997). Factors contributing to the decline and degradation of these ecosystems include fire suppression and associated conifer tree invasion, invasion of non-native species, grazing, and urban and agricultural conversion (Giles 1970, Agee 1993, Clampitt 1993, Crawford and Hall 1997).
Many species of flora and fauna associated with these unique habitats are of conservation concern due to declines in population, local extirpation, or close associations with the declining habitat. These include the western gray squirrel (Sciurus griseus), Mazama pocket gopher (Thomomys mazama), Lewis’ woodpecker (Melanerpes lewisii), white-breasted nuthatch (Sitta carolinensis aculeata), streaked horned lark (Eremophila alpestris strigata), western meadowlark (Stunella neglecta), Oregon vesper sparrow (Pooecetes gramineus affinis), western bluebird (Sialia mexicana), racer (Coluber constrictor), mardon skipper (Polites mardon), Puget blue (Plebejus icaroides blackmorei), whulge checkerspot (Euphydryas editha taylori), zerene fritillary (Speyeria zerene bremnerii), white-topped aster (Aster curtus), golden paintbrush (Castilleja levisecta), common bluecup (Githopsis specularioides), and rose checkermallow (Sidalcea malviflora spp. virgata) (Dunn and Ewing 1997). Native grasslands and oak woodlands in the Puget Lowland and Willamette Valley ecoregions (Omernik 1987) are found in dry environments formerly strongly influenced by frequent fires, many if not most of which were ignited by Native Americans (Norton 1979). Oak woodlands may be dominated by Oregon white oak (Quercus garryana), or co-dominated by that species and Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), Oregon ash (Fraxinus latifolia), bigleaf maple (Acer macrophyllum), or Pacific madrone (Arbutus menziesii). They range from open savannas of scattered trees to dense-canopied forests, with a range of herbaceous or shrubby understory types (Agee 1993, Chappell and Crawford 1997). They occur on relatively dry sites or moist riparian environments within prairie, or formerly prairie, landscapes. Native grasslands are dominated primarily by Roemer’s fescue (Festuca idahoensis var. roemeri), red fescue (Festuca rubra), or California oatgrass (Danthonia californica), but also harbor a wide variety of forbs that sometimes co-dominate with the grasses (Chappell and Crawford 1997). Three broad categories of grasslands can be distinguished based on the type of environment in which they grow. “Prairies” are located on flat to rolling or mounded plains that formed from deep soil deposits, most often consisting of coarse glacial outwash. They can be extensive in area. Most prairies are now located in the southern Puget Sound area. “Balds” are located on shallow-soiled moderate to steep slopes that most often face south or west. Rock outcrops are typically present within or adjacent to balds. Balds are typically naturally smaller in extent than prairies and surrounded by forest. Most balds are located in the northern Puget Lowland. Grasslands can also be located on coastal bluffs of the northern Puget Lowland, where soils are derived from sandy glacial deposits. Many formerly native grasslands are now dominated or co-dominated by non-native grasses, or have been invaded by shrubs, especially Scot’s broom (Cytisus scoparius), Nootka rose (Rosa nutkana), and common snowberry (Symphoricarpos albus). A now-rare fourth major type of native grassland, “wet prairies”, was not mapped as part of this project.
Prior to this project, digital maps of oak woodlands or grasslands existed for specific geographic areas of western Washington, including Fort Lewis, McChord Air Force Base, and Thurston County (Kessler 1990, Macklin and Thompson 1992, Crawford et al. 1995, Rolph and Houck 1996). A map of oak woodlands in the remainder of Pierce County was completed in 1999. In addition, the Washington Natural Heritage Program has been compiling locations of high-quality native grasslands and oak woodlands for many years. A single ecoregion-wide digital cover of oak woodlands and grasslands was envisioned by multiple cooperating partners as a valuable tool for biological conservation and resource planning. The first iteration of such a comprehensive digital cover was completed in 1999 and summarized by Chappell et al. (2001). The product described herein is an updated version of the 1999 cover.
Service Item Id: d0773d0ece6b40ab801bc59fdcee191f
Copyright Text: Thelma Gilmur’s persistence in initiating the Pierce County oak map project is appreciated. Lynn Carey’s enthusiasm and diligence as a volunteer intern revived the Pierce County project at a pivotal point. Julia Lippert, Karen Trueman, Steve Farone, and Mark Goering supervised digitizing and assisted with compilation of digital data, and Sue Clark, Dawn Garcia, Debbie May, and Melanie Mills digitized. Tahoma Audubon Society volunteers who helped map oaks in Pierce County included Michael Brown, Colleen Pidgeon, Sam Agnew, Marjorie Brazier, A. Conde, Mary Jane Cooper, Care deLeeuw, Bryan and Jeanette Dorner, Roxie Giddings, Coowe Moss Kidd, Rebecca Kleine, David Marshall, Nora Miller, Jennifer Ray, and Hilda Skott. Brian McTeague and Ted Morris helped with field verification of previous mapping efforts. Bob Altman, Terry Cook, Elizabeth Rodrick, and Katherine Rose facilitated cooperation with American Bird Conservancy, The Nature Conservancy, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, and Pierce County, respectively. Rex Crawford, Catherine Houck, Richard Kessler, Angela Lombardi, John Macklin, Melea Potter, David Rolph, and Dan Thompson produced maps that contributed to this project. Thanks to Rex Crawford and Pat Dunn for review and interpretation of the Fort Lewis prairie map. John Gamon and Steve Farone provided valuable advice and comment. This work was funded in part by American Bird Conservancy, The Nature Conservancy of Washington, and Pierce County Planning and Land Services
Default Visibility: true
MaxRecordCount: 1000
Supported Query Formats: JSON, geoJSON, PBF
Min Scale: 5000000
Max Scale: 0
Supports Advanced Queries: true
Supports Statistics: true
Has Labels: false
Can Modify Layer: true
Can Scale Symbols: false
Use Standardized Queries: true
Supports Datum Transformation: true
Extent:
XMin: -1.3760858147889463E7
YMin: 5705938.54868357
XMax: -1.3577578678970182E7
YMax: 6234778.343548426
Spatial Reference: 102100
(3857)
Drawing Info:
Renderer:
Unique Value Renderer:
Field 1: COVER_DESC
Field 2: N/A
Field 3: N/A
Field Delimiter: ,
Default Symbol:
Default Label: N/A
UniqueValueInfos:
-
Value: Airport Grassland
Label: Airport Grassland
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [255, 235, 175, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
-
Value: Semi-Native Grassland
Label: Semi-Native Grassland
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [255, 255, 190, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
-
Value: Exotic (Non-Native) Grassland
Label: Exotic (Non-Native) Grassland
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [255, 235, 175, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
-
Value: Native Grassland
Label: Native Grassland
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [255, 255, 0, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
-
Value: Shrubland Potentially Restorable to Grassland
Label: Shrubland Potentially Restorable to Grassland
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [255, 211, 127, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
-
Value: Unsurveyed Grassland
Label: Unsurveyed Grassland
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [230, 230, 0, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
-
Value: Scattered Oak Canopy
Label: Scattered Oak Canopy
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [163, 255, 115, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
-
Value: Urban Oak Canopy
Label: Urban Oak Canopy
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [76, 230, 0, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
-
Value: Oak-Dominant Forest or Woodland Canopy
Label: Oak-Dominant Forest or Woodland Canopy
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [56, 168, 0, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
-
Value: Oak-Conifer Forest or Woodland Canopy
Label: Oak-Conifer Forest or Woodland Canopy
Description: N/A
Symbol:
Style: esriSFSSolid
Color: [38, 115, 0, 255]
Outline:
Style: esriSLSSolid
Color: [110, 110, 110, 255]
Width: 0
Transparency: 0
Labeling Info:
Advanced Query Capabilities:
Supports Statistics: true
Supports OrderBy: true
Supports Distinct: true
Supports Pagination: true
Supports TrueCurve: true
Supports Returning Query Extent: true
Supports Query With Distance: true
Supports Sql Expression: true
Supports Query With ResultType: false
Supports Returning Geometry Centroid: false
Supports Binning LOD: false
Supports Query With LOD Spatial Reference: false
HasZ: false
HasM: false
Has Attachments: false
HTML Popup Type: esriServerHTMLPopupTypeAsHTMLText
Type ID Field: null
Fields:
-
OBJECTID
(
type: esriFieldTypeOID, alias: FID
)
-
Shape
(
type: esriFieldTypeGeometry, alias: Shape
)
-
COVER_DESC
(
type: esriFieldTypeString, alias: COVER_DESC, length: 60
)
-
COVER_CD
(
type: esriFieldTypeString, alias: COVER_CD, length: 2
)
-
GIS_UPDT
(
type: esriFieldTypeInteger, alias: GIS_UPDT
)
-
Perimeter
(
type: esriFieldTypeDouble, alias: Perimeter
)
-
Area
(
type: esriFieldTypeDouble, alias: Area
)
-
Acres
(
type: esriFieldTypeDouble, alias: Acres
)
-
Hectares
(
type: esriFieldTypeDouble, alias: Hectares
)
-
Shape_Length
(
type: esriFieldTypeDouble, alias: Shape_Length
)
-
Shape_Area
(
type: esriFieldTypeDouble, alias: Shape_Area
)
Supported Operations:
Query
Query Attachments
Query Analytic
Generate Renderer
Return Updates
Iteminfo
Thumbnail
Metadata