4 datasets found
  1. Aspen Delineation - Aspen Delineation Project [ds362]

    • data.cnra.ca.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +5more
    Updated Oct 23, 2023
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    California Department of Fish and Wildlife (2023). Aspen Delineation - Aspen Delineation Project [ds362] [Dataset]. https://data.cnra.ca.gov/dataset/aspen-delineation-aspen-delineation-project-ds362
    Explore at:
    zip, csv, arcgis geoservices rest api, geojson, kml, htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 23, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Fish and Wildlifehttps://wildlife.ca.gov/
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The database represents delineations of aspen stands, where aspen assessment data was gathered. Aspen assessment information corresponding to this polygon layer can be found in the layer: ADP_POINT. Data collection occurred in the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit (Placer and Eldorado Counties); Alturas Field Office-BLM (Modoc County); California Tahoe Conservancy (Placer and Eldorado Counties), the Stanislaus National Forest (Tuolumne County); Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest(Alpine County); and Tahoe National Forest (Nevada and Sierra Counties); and the California Department of Fish and Game (Modoc County). This is a multi-agency contributed dataset gathered by the agencies listed above during the summers of 2001-2005. Assessment data and GIS delineations were collected using a standardized protocol developed by members of the Aspen Delineation Project, a cooperative project of the US Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the California Department of Fish and Game. Surveying was completed by foot surveys of watersheds surveyed. This is the current completed data set for aspen distribution of land administered by these agencies. Data captures location of aspen stands and vegetative characteristics of the aspen stand, and if browsing of the aspen was present or absent. Also associated with this database is a point layer (ADP_POINT) containing aspen stands delineated in conjunction with the aspen assessment information. Data Compilation: The Aspen Delineation Project (ADP) is a collaborative effort of the U.S. Forest Service's Pacific Southwest Region, the California Department of Fish and Games Resource Assessment Program, and the California Office of Bureau of Land Management. Principal Investigator for ADP is David Burton; visit: www.aspensite.org for more information regarding the ADP. The Department of Fish and Games, Resource Assessment Program compiled this information from the collaborating agencies and other researchers, and formatted the data into a common database for the purpose of facilitating access to data related to the conservation of Quaking Aspen in California. This information portal falls within the ADP goals to help agencies and land managers identify, map, treat, and monitor aspen habitats. This dataset is a portion of a master database compiled during a year long effort in 2005 to pull together current GIS layers and maps depicting Aspen communities in California.

  2. a

    BOE TRA 2024 co12

    • gis-california.opendata.arcgis.com
    • gis.data.ca.gov
    • +2more
    Updated May 29, 2024
    + more versions
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    California Department of Tax and Fee Administration (2024). BOE TRA 2024 co12 [Dataset]. https://gis-california.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/CDTFA::humboldt-2024-roll-year?layer=1
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    Dataset updated
    May 29, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Tax and Fee Administration
    License

    MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Description

    This shapefile contains tax rate area (TRA) boundaries in Humboldt County for the specified assessment roll year. Boundary alignment is based on the 2017 county parcel map. A tax rate area (TRA) is a geographic area within the jurisdiction of a unique combination of cities, schools, and revenue districts that utilize the regular city or county assessment roll, per Government Code 54900. Each TRA is assigned a six-digit numeric identifier, referred to as a TRA number. TRA = tax rate area number

  3. i15 LandUse Humboldt2012

    • cnra-test-nmp-cnra.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Jun 15, 2023
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    Carlos.Lewis@water.ca.gov_DWR (2023). i15 LandUse Humboldt2012 [Dataset]. https://cnra-test-nmp-cnra.hub.arcgis.com/items/78b70733d9134744b7e708a5420a5164
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 15, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    California Department of Water Resourceshttp://www.water.ca.gov/
    Authors
    Carlos.Lewis@water.ca.gov_DWR
    Area covered
    Description

    The 2012 Humboldt County land use survey data was developed by the State of California, Department of Water Resources (DWR) through its Division of Integrated Regional Water Management (DIRWM) and Division of Statewide Integrated Water Management (DSIWM). Land use boundaries were digitized and land use data were gathered by staff of DWR’s North Central Region using extensive field visits and aerial photography. The land uses that were mapped were detailed agricultural land uses, and lesser detailed urban and native vegetation land uses. The land use data went through standard quality control procedures before final processing. Quality control procedures were performed jointly by staff at DWR’s DSIWM headquarters and North Central Region. The original spatial reference of this dataset is NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N, which has been transformed into WGS 1984 Web Mercator.The associated data are considered DWR enterprise GIS data, which meet all appropriate requirements of the DWR Spatial Data Standards, specifically the DWR Spatial Data Standard version 3.5, dated April 12, 2023. DWR makes no warranties or guarantees - either expressed or implied - as to the completeness, accuracy, or correctness of the data. DWR neither accepts nor assumes liability arising from or for any incorrect, incomplete, or misleading subject data. See the CADWR Land User Viewer (gis.water.ca.gov/app/CADWRLandUseViewer) for the most current contact information. Comments, problems, improvements, updates, or suggestions should be forwarded to gis@water.ca.gov.

  4. a

    i15 LandUse Humboldt1996

    • cnra-gis-open-data-staging-cnra.hub.arcgis.com
    • cnra-test-nmp-cnra.hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Feb 8, 2023
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    Carlos.Lewis@water.ca.gov_DWR (2023). i15 LandUse Humboldt1996 [Dataset]. https://cnra-gis-open-data-staging-cnra.hub.arcgis.com/items/8e33a5e9528548abaf02f84f4fad517f
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 8, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Carlos.Lewis@water.ca.gov_DWR
    Area covered
    Description

    The 1996 Humboldt County land use survey data set was developed by DWR through its Division of Planning and Local Assistance (DPLA). The data was gathered using aerial photography and extensive field visits, the land use boundaries and attributes were digitized, and the resultant data went through standard quality control procedures before finalizing. The land uses that were gathered were detailed agricultural land uses, and lesser detailed urban and native vegetation land uses. The data was gathered and digitized by staff of DWR’s Northern District. Quality control procedures were performed jointly by staff at DWR’s DPLA headquarters and Northern District. Important Points about Using this Data Set: 1. The land use boundaries were hand drawn directly on USGS quad maps and then digitized. They were drawn to depict observable areas of the same land use. They were not drawn to represent legal parcel (ownership) boundaries, or meant to be used as parcel boundaries. 2. This survey was a "snapshot" in time. The indicated land use attributes of each delineated area (polygon) were based upon what the surveyor saw in the field at that time, and, to an extent possible, whatever additional information the aerial photography might provide. For example, the surveyor might have seen a cropped field in the photograph, and the field visit showed a field of corn, so the field was given a corn attribute. In another field, the photograph might have shown a crop that was golden in color (indicating grain prior to harvest), and the field visit showed newly planted corn. This field would be given an attribute showing a double crop, grain followed by corn. The DWR land use attribute structure allows for up to three crops per delineated area (polygon). In the cases where there were crops grown before the survey took place, the surveyor may or may not have been able to detect them from the field or the photographs. For crops planted after the survey date, the surveyor could not account for these crops. Thus, although the data is very accurate for that point in time, it may not be an accurate determination of what was grown in the fields for the whole year. If the area being surveyed does have double or multicropping systems, it is likely that there are more crops grown than could be surveyed with a "snapshot". 3. If the data is to be brought into a GIS for analysis of cropped (or planted) acreage, two things must be understood: a. The acreage of each field delineated is the gross area of the field. The amount of actual planted and irrigated acreage will always be less than the gross acreage, because of ditches, farm roads, other roads, farmsteads, etc. Thus, a delineated corn field may have a GIS calculated acreage of 40 acres but will have a smaller cropped (or net) acreage, maybe 38 acres. b. Double and multicropping must be taken into account. A delineated field of 40 acres might have been cropped first with grain, then with corn, and coded as such. To estimate actual cropped acres, the two crops are added together (38 acres of grain and 38 acres of corn) which results in a total of 76 acres of net crop (or planted) acres. 4. Irrigation method information was not collected for this survey. 5. Not all land use codes will be represented in the survey.

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TwitterTwitter
Email
Click to copy link
Link copied
Close
Cite
California Department of Fish and Wildlife (2023). Aspen Delineation - Aspen Delineation Project [ds362] [Dataset]. https://data.cnra.ca.gov/dataset/aspen-delineation-aspen-delineation-project-ds362
Organization logo

Aspen Delineation - Aspen Delineation Project [ds362]

Explore at:
zip, csv, arcgis geoservices rest api, geojson, kml, htmlAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Oct 23, 2023
Dataset authored and provided by
California Department of Fish and Wildlifehttps://wildlife.ca.gov/
License

Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically

Description

The database represents delineations of aspen stands, where aspen assessment data was gathered. Aspen assessment information corresponding to this polygon layer can be found in the layer: ADP_POINT. Data collection occurred in the Lake Tahoe Basin Management Unit (Placer and Eldorado Counties); Alturas Field Office-BLM (Modoc County); California Tahoe Conservancy (Placer and Eldorado Counties), the Stanislaus National Forest (Tuolumne County); Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest(Alpine County); and Tahoe National Forest (Nevada and Sierra Counties); and the California Department of Fish and Game (Modoc County). This is a multi-agency contributed dataset gathered by the agencies listed above during the summers of 2001-2005. Assessment data and GIS delineations were collected using a standardized protocol developed by members of the Aspen Delineation Project, a cooperative project of the US Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the California Department of Fish and Game. Surveying was completed by foot surveys of watersheds surveyed. This is the current completed data set for aspen distribution of land administered by these agencies. Data captures location of aspen stands and vegetative characteristics of the aspen stand, and if browsing of the aspen was present or absent. Also associated with this database is a point layer (ADP_POINT) containing aspen stands delineated in conjunction with the aspen assessment information. Data Compilation: The Aspen Delineation Project (ADP) is a collaborative effort of the U.S. Forest Service's Pacific Southwest Region, the California Department of Fish and Games Resource Assessment Program, and the California Office of Bureau of Land Management. Principal Investigator for ADP is David Burton; visit: www.aspensite.org for more information regarding the ADP. The Department of Fish and Games, Resource Assessment Program compiled this information from the collaborating agencies and other researchers, and formatted the data into a common database for the purpose of facilitating access to data related to the conservation of Quaking Aspen in California. This information portal falls within the ADP goals to help agencies and land managers identify, map, treat, and monitor aspen habitats. This dataset is a portion of a master database compiled during a year long effort in 2005 to pull together current GIS layers and maps depicting Aspen communities in California.

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