45 datasets found
  1. W

    Black and African American Population Concentration - Northern CA

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    geotiff, wcs, wms
    Updated Mar 25, 2025
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    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force (2025). Black and African American Population Concentration - Northern CA [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/clm-black-and-african-american-population-concentration-northern-ca
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    geotiff, wms, wcsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 25, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force
    License

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

    Area covered
    California, Northern California
    Description

    Relative concentration of the Northern California region's Hispanic/Latino population. The variable HISPANIC records all individuals who select Hispanic or Latino in response to the Census questionnaire, regardless of their response to the racial identity question.

    "Relative concentration" is a measure that compares the proportion of population within each Census block group data unit that identify as Hispanic or LatinoAmerican Indian / Alaska Native alone to the proportion of all people that live within the 1,207 block groups in the Northern California RRK region that identify as Hispanic or LatinoAmerican Indian / Alaska native alone. Example: if 5.2% of people in a block group identify as HISPANIC, the block group has twice the proportion of HISPANIC individuals compared to the Northern California RRK region (2.6%), and more than three times the proportion compared to the entire state of California (1.6%). If the local proportion is twice the regional proportion, then HISPANIC individuals are highly concentrated locally.

  2. W

    Asian Population Concentration - Northern CA

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    geotiff, wcs, wms
    Updated Mar 25, 2025
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    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force (2025). Asian Population Concentration - Northern CA [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/clm-asian-population-concentration-northern-ca
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    geotiff, wms, wcsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 25, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force
    License

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

    Area covered
    California, Northern California
    Description

    Relative concentration of the Northern California region's Asian American population. The variable ASIANALN records all individuals who select Asian as their SOLE racial identity in response to the Census questionnaire, regardless of their response to the Hispanic ethnicity question. Both Hispanic and non-Hispanic in the Census questionnaire are potentially associated with the Asian race alone.

    "Relative concentration" is a measure that compares the proportion of population within each Census block group data unit that identify as ASIANALN alone to the proportion of all people that live within the 1,207 block groups in the Northern California RRK region that identify as ASIANALN alone. Example: if 5.2% of people in a block group identify as HSPBIPOC, the block group has twice the proportion of ASIANALN individuals compared to the Northern California RRK region (2.6%), and more than three times the proportion compared to the entire state of California (1.6%). If the local proportion is twice the regional proportion, then ASIANALN individuals are highly concentrated locally.

  3. U

    Code and Data to fit an Integrated Population Model for the Foothill...

    • data.usgs.gov
    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated May 16, 2024
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    Jonathan Rose; Sarah Kupferberg; Clara Wheeler; Patrick Kleeman; Brian Halstead (2024). Code and Data to fit an Integrated Population Model for the Foothill Yellow-legged Frog, Rana boylii in northern California [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5066/P9N019EK
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    Dataset updated
    May 16, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    United States Geological Surveyhttp://www.usgs.gov/
    Authors
    Jonathan Rose; Sarah Kupferberg; Clara Wheeler; Patrick Kleeman; Brian Halstead
    License

    U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    1993 - 2019
    Area covered
    California, Northern California
    Description

    These data include egg mass counts and adult capture-mark-recapture histories for Foothill Yellow-legged frogs at two streams in northern California. Data were collected from the South Fork Eel River and its tributary, Fox Creek, from 1993-2019. Data from Hurdygurdy Creek were collected from 2002-2008.

  4. W

    Low Income Population Concentration - Northern CA

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    geotiff, wcs, wms
    Updated Mar 25, 2025
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    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force (2025). Low Income Population Concentration - Northern CA [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/clm-low-income-population-concentration-northern-ca
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    wcs, geotiff, wmsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 25, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force
    License

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

    Area covered
    California, Northern California
    Description

    Relative concentration of the estimated number of people in the Northern California region that live in a household defined as "low income." There are multiple ways to define low income. These data apply the most common standard: low income population consists of all members of households that collectively have income less than twice the federal poverty threshold that applies to their household type. Household type refers to the household's resident composition: the number of independent adults plus dependents that can be of any age, from children to elderly. For example, a household with four people ' one working adult parent and three dependent children ' has a different poverty threshold than a household comprised of four unrelated independent adults.

    Due to high estimate uncertainty for many block group estimates of the number of people living in low income households, some records cannot be reliably assigned a class and class code comparable to those assigned to race/ethnicity data from the decennial Census.

    "Relative concentration" is a measure that compares the proportion of population within each Census block group data unit to the proportion of all people that live within the 1,207 block groups in the Northern California RRK region. See the "Data Units" description below for how these relative concentrations are broken into categories in this "low income" metric.

  5. QuickFacts: North Highlands CDP, California

    • census.gov
    • shutdown.census.gov
    csv
    Updated Jul 1, 2021
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    United States Census Bureau (2021). QuickFacts: North Highlands CDP, California [Dataset]. https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/northhighlandscdpcalifornia/AFN120217
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    csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 1, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    North Highlands, California
    Description

    U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts statistics for North Highlands CDP, California. QuickFacts data are derived from: Population Estimates, American Community Survey, Census of Population and Housing, Current Population Survey, Small Area Health Insurance Estimates, Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates, State and County Housing Unit Estimates, County Business Patterns, Nonemployer Statistics, Economic Census, Survey of Business Owners, Building Permits.

  6. North Park, San Diego, CA, US Demographics 2025

    • point2homes.com
    html
    Updated 2025
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    Point2Homes (2025). North Park, San Diego, CA, US Demographics 2025 [Dataset]. https://www.point2homes.com/US/Neighborhood/CA/San-Diego-County/San-Diego/North-Park-Demographics.html
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    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Point2Homeshttps://plus.google.com/116333963642442482447/posts
    Time period covered
    2025
    Area covered
    North Park, San Diego, California, United States
    Variables measured
    Asian, Other, White, 2 units, Over 65, Median age, Blue collar, Mobile home, 3 or 4 units, 5 to 9 units, and 70 more
    Description

    Comprehensive demographic dataset for North Park, San Diego, CA, US including population statistics, household income, housing units, education levels, employment data, and transportation with year-over-year changes.

  7. D

    Data from: Climate change and the northern elephant seal (Mirounga...

    • datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov
    • search.dataone.org
    • +3more
    Updated Feb 12, 2019
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    García-Aguilar, María C.; Arias-del-Razo, Alejandro; Elorriaga-Verplancken, Fernando R.; Turrent, Cuauhtémoc; Schramm, Yolanda (2019). Climate change and the northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris) population in Baja California, Mexico [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.0qc39
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 12, 2019
    Authors
    García-Aguilar, María C.; Arias-del-Razo, Alejandro; Elorriaga-Verplancken, Fernando R.; Turrent, Cuauhtémoc; Schramm, Yolanda
    Area covered
    Mexico, Baja California
    Description

    The Earth′s climate is warming, especially in the mid- and high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. The northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris) breeds and haul-outs on islands and the mainland of Baja California, Mexico, and California, U.S.A. At the beginning of the 21st century, numbers of elephant seals in California are increasing, but the status of Baja California populations is unknown, and some data suggest they may be decreasing. We hypothesize that the elephant seal population of Baja California is experiencing a decline because the animals are not migrating as far south due to warming sea and air temperatures. Here we assessed population trends of the Baja California population, and climate change in the region. The numbers of northern elephant seals in Baja California colonies have been decreasing since the 1990s, and both the surface waters off Baja California and the local air temperatures have warmed during the last three decades. We propose that declining population sizes may be attributable to decreased migration towards the southern portions of the range in response to the observed temperature increases. Further research is needed to confirm our hypothesis; however, if true, it would imply that elephant seal colonies of Baja California and California are not demographically isolated which would pose challenges to environmental and management policies between Mexico and the United States.

  8. f

    Study population characteristics among 4-64-year-olds, Kaiser Permanente...

    • datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov
    • plos.figshare.com
    Updated Feb 26, 2020
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    Lewis, Ned; King, James; Goddard, Kristin; Zhou, James; Zerbo, Ousseny; Fireman, Bruce; Asher, Jason; Klein, Nicola P. (2020). Study population characteristics among 4-64-year-olds, Kaiser Permanente Northern California 2017–18. [Dataset]. https://datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov/dataset?q=0000576184
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 26, 2020
    Authors
    Lewis, Ned; King, James; Goddard, Kristin; Zhou, James; Zerbo, Ousseny; Fireman, Bruce; Asher, Jason; Klein, Nicola P.
    Area covered
    California, Northern California
    Description

    Study population characteristics among 4-64-year-olds, Kaiser Permanente Northern California 2017–18.

  9. Population of the United States in 1900, by state and ethnic status

    • statista.com
    Updated Oct 2, 2023
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    Statista (2023). Population of the United States in 1900, by state and ethnic status [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1067122/united-states-population-state-ethnicity-1900/
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 2, 2023
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    1900
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    New York was the most populous state in the union in the year 1900. It had the largest white population, for both native born and foreign born persons, and together these groups made up over 7.1 million of New York's 7.2 million inhabitants at this time. The United States' industrial centers to the north and northeast were one of the most important economic draws during this period, and states in these regions had the largest foreign born white populations. Ethnic minorities Immigration into the agricultural southern states was much lower than the north, and these states had the largest Black populations due to the legacy of slavery - this balance would begin to shift in the following decades as a large share of the Black population migrated to urban centers to the north during the Great Migration. The Japanese and Chinese populations at this time were more concentrated in the West, as these states were the most common point of entry for Asians into the country. The states with the largest Native American populations were to the west and southwest, due to the legacy of forced displacement - this included the Indian Territory, an unorganized and independent territory assigned to the Native American population in the early 1800s, although this was incorporated into Oklahoma when it was admitted into the union in 1907. Additionally, non-taxpaying Native Americans were historically omitted from the U.S. Census, as they usually lived in separate communities and could not vote or hold office - more of an effort was made to count all Native Americans from 1890 onward, although there are likely inaccuracies in the figures given here. Changing distribution Internal migration in the 20th century greatly changed population distribution across the country, with California and Florida now ranking among the three most populous states in the U.S. today, while they were outside the top 20 in 1900. The growth of Western states' populations was largely due to the wave of internal migration during the Great Depression, where unemployment in the east saw many emigrate to "newer" states in search of opportunity, as well as significant immigration from Latin America (especially Mexico) and Asia since the mid-1900s.

  10. Q

    QuickFacts: North Fair Oaks CDP, California

    • census.gov
    • shutdown.census.gov
    csv
    Updated Jul 1, 2021
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    United States Census Bureau (2021). QuickFacts: North Fair Oaks CDP, California [Dataset]. https://www.census.gov/quickfacts/fact/table/northfairoakscdpcalifornia/AGE135220
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    csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 1, 2021
    Dataset authored and provided by
    United States Census Bureau
    License

    CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    North Fair Oaks, California
    Description

    U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts statistics for North Fair Oaks CDP, California. QuickFacts data are derived from: Population Estimates, American Community Survey, Census of Population and Housing, Current Population Survey, Small Area Health Insurance Estimates, Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates, State and County Housing Unit Estimates, County Business Patterns, Nonemployer Statistics, Economic Census, Survey of Business Owners, Building Permits.

  11. Climate change and the northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris)...

    • plos.figshare.com
    • figshare.com
    xls
    Updated Jun 2, 2023
    + more versions
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    María C. García-Aguilar; Cuauhtémoc Turrent; Fernando R. Elorriaga-Verplancken; Alejandro Arias-Del-Razo; Yolanda Schramm (2023). Climate change and the northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris) population in Baja California, Mexico - Table 1 [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193211.t001
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    xlsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 2, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    PLOShttp://plos.org/
    Authors
    María C. García-Aguilar; Cuauhtémoc Turrent; Fernando R. Elorriaga-Verplancken; Alejandro Arias-Del-Razo; Yolanda Schramm
    License

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

    Area covered
    Mexico, Baja California
    Description

    Climate change and the northern elephant seal (Mirounga angustirostris) population in Baja California, Mexico - Table 1

  12. California - Kirkbride, Pittsburgh, PA, US Demographics 2025

    • point2homes.com
    html
    Updated 2025
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    Point2Homes (2025). California - Kirkbride, Pittsburgh, PA, US Demographics 2025 [Dataset]. https://www.point2homes.com/US/Neighborhood/PA/North-Pittsburgh/California-Kirkbride-Demographics.html
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    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Point2Homeshttps://plus.google.com/116333963642442482447/posts
    Time period covered
    2025
    Area covered
    California-Kirkbride, Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh, United States
    Variables measured
    Asian, Other, White, 2 units, Over 65, Median age, Blue collar, Mobile home, 3 or 4 units, 5 to 9 units, and 70 more
    Description

    Comprehensive demographic dataset for California - Kirkbride, Pittsburgh, PA, US including population statistics, household income, housing units, education levels, employment data, and transportation with year-over-year changes.

  13. d

    Data from: Mixed population trends inside a California protected area:...

    • search.dataone.org
    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • +1more
    Updated Dec 23, 2023
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    Julien Wright-Ueda (2023). Mixed population trends inside a California protected area: Evidence from long-term community science monitoring [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.6t1g1jx2b
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    Dataset updated
    Dec 23, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Dryad Digital Repository
    Authors
    Julien Wright-Ueda
    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2023
    Description

    Protected areas are one of the most widespread and accepted conservation interventions, yet their  population trends are rarely compared to regional trends to gain insight into their effectiveness. Here, we leverage two long-term community science datasets to demonstrate mixed effects of protected areas on long-term bird population trends. We analyzed 31 years of bird transect data recorded by community volunteers across all major habitats of Stanford University’s Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve to determine the population trends for a sample of 66 species. We found that nearly a third of species experienced long-term declines, and on average, all species declined by 12%. Further, we averaged species trends by conservation status and key life history attributes to identify correlates and possible drivers of these trends. Observed increases in some cavity-nesters and declines of scrub-associated species suggest that long-term fire suppression may be a key driver, reshaping bird communit...,

    From 1989 to 2020, volunteer observers conducted monthly surveys of six sectors within Stanford University's Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve (JRBP). Each survey consisted of a trail-based transect in which a group of observers walked the trail in the morning and counted all birds detected over roughly 3 hours. Observers recorded the number of each species seen or heard along the route, regardless of the distance to the bird. Over 31 years of surveys, 192 observers conducted 2,055 transects and recorded a total of 473,401 observations of 184 species (91% of JRBP’s documented avian richness). We used these data to estimate long-term avian population trends at JRBP. Prior to analy- sis, we performed extensive data cleaning, including the standardization of species names and observer identity. Unlikely species without notes or supporting information were removed from the analysis. All transects with fewer than seven species (n = 30) were considered incidental and removed. These transect..., , # Data and model code from: Mixed population trends inside a California protected area: evidence from long-term community science monitoring

    Â

    Â

    Here, we provide the R code used to model the abundance for each species in the Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve. We have also provided a spreadsheet with each species' life history traits, taxonomy, annual trends in the preserve, and annual trends in the surrounding region (BCR 32) from the North American Breeding Bird Survey. Finally, we have attached an R code that analyzes the trends for various life history traits and taxonomic families, compares trends within the protected area and in the surrounding region, and produces figures 2, 4, and 5 in the main manuscript and all supplementary material figures.

    Â

    Description of the data and file structure

    **Â **

    The JRBP_Transect_Data_Species.R file provides the code required to create a generalized linear mixed model for each species in R-INLA and extract the percent change in ab...

  14. Meadowfoam Monitoring Plan - North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve, Butte...

    • data.ca.gov
    • data.cnra.ca.gov
    • +1more
    xlsx, zip
    Updated Dec 7, 2023
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    California Department of Fish and Wildlife (2023). Meadowfoam Monitoring Plan - North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve, Butte County [Dataset]. https://data.ca.gov/dataset/meadowfoam-monitoring-plan-north-table-mountain-ecological-reserve-butte-county
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    zip, xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 7, 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

    Area covered
    Butte County
    Description

    Butte County meadowfoam (Limnanthes floccosa ssp. californica) is an annual plant that is designated as endangered under the California Endangered Species Act and federal Endangered Species Act. Butte County meadowfoam is only found in a narrow 28-mile strip along the eastern Sacramento Valley in Butte County, and a population of Butte County meadowfoam is located at the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) North Table Mountain Ecological Reserve (Reserve). Populations of Butte County meadowfoam have been subject to historic grazing practices. Grazing took place at the Reserve for many years prior to it becoming an ecological reserve, and CDFW has continued this practice to manage vegetation. The monitoring consists of three primary parts: (1) a census of Butte County meadowfoam within monitoring plots; (2) monitoring photographs; and (3) general written documentation of grazing impacts, if available. The census data is intended to to represent the total number of Butte County meadowfoam plants at the reserve, subpopulations may exist that we did not locate, and if so, our dataset does not include them. The monitoring photograph files are named with a unique identifier (e.g. "Al") followed by a date in the format YYYYMMDD.

    This data and metadata were submitted by California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) Staff though the Data Management Plan (DMP) framework with the id: DMP000047. For more information, please visit https://wildlife.ca.gov/Data/Sci-Data.

  15. W

    Hispanic and or Black, Indigenous or People of Color (Hspbipoc) Population...

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    geotiff, wcs, wms
    Updated Mar 25, 2025
    + more versions
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    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force (2025). Hispanic and or Black, Indigenous or People of Color (Hspbipoc) Population Concentration - Northern CA [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/clm-hispanic-and-or-black-indigenous-or-people-of-color-hspbipoc-population-concentration-northern-c
    Explore at:
    wms, geotiff, wcsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 25, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force
    License

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

    Area covered
    California, Northern California
    Description

    Relative concentration of the Northern California region's Hispanic and/or Black, Indigenous or person of color (HSPBIPOC) population. The variable HSPBIPOC is equivalent to all individuals who select a combination of racial and ethnic identity in response to the Census questionnaire EXCEPT those who select "not Hispanic" for the ethnic identity question, and "white race alone" for the racial identity question. This is the most encompassing possible definition of racial and ethnic identities that may be associated with historic underservice by agencies, or be more likely to express environmental justice concerns (as compared to predominantly non-Hispanic white communities). Until 2021, federal agency guidance for considering environmental justice impacts of proposed actions focused on how the actions affected "racial or ethnic minorities." "Racial minority" is an increasingly meaningless concept in the USA, and particularly so in California, where only about 3/8 of the state's population identifies as non-Hispanic and white race alone - a clear majority of Californians identify as Hispanic and/or not white. Because many federal and state map screening tools continue to rely on "minority population" as an indicator for flagging potentially vulnerable / disadvantaged/ underserved populations, our analysis includes the variable HSPBIPOC which is effectively "all minority" population according to the now outdated federal environmental justice direction. A more meaningful analysis for the potential impact of forest management actions on specific populations considers racial or ethnic populations individually: e.g., all people identifying as Hispanic regardless of race; all people identifying as American Indian, regardless of Hispanic ethnicity; etc.

    "Relative concentration" is a measure that compares the proportion of population within each Census block group data unit that identify as HSPBIPOC alone to the proportion of all people that live within the 1,207 block groups in the Northern California RRK region that identify as HSPBIPOC alone. Example: if 5.2% of people in a block group identify as HSPBIPOC, the block group has twice the proportion of HSPBIPOC individuals compared to the Northern California RRK region (2.6%), and more than three times the proportion compared to the entire state of California (1.6%). If the local proportion is twice the regional proportion, then HSPBIPOC individuals are highly concentrated locally.

  16. f

    Performance statistics of three top models of demographic factors relating...

    • datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov
    • plos.figshare.com
    Updated Nov 4, 2015
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    Woods, Leslie W.; Matthews, Sean M.; Gabriel, Mourad W.; Purcell, Kathryn; Brown, Richard N.; Foley, Janet E.; Barrett, Reginald H.; Thompson, Craig; Clifford, Deana L.; Poppenga, Robert; Higley, J. Mark; Stephenson, Nicole; Jones, Megan; Keller, Stefan M.; Wengert, Greta M.; Gaffney, Patricia; Sweitzer, Rick A.; Sacks, Benjamin N. (2015). Performance statistics of three top models of demographic factors relating to ultimate cause of mortality for 136 fishers (Pekania pennanti) within the two isolated populations, northern California and southern Sierra Nevada. [Dataset]. https://datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov/dataset?q=0001909962
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 4, 2015
    Authors
    Woods, Leslie W.; Matthews, Sean M.; Gabriel, Mourad W.; Purcell, Kathryn; Brown, Richard N.; Foley, Janet E.; Barrett, Reginald H.; Thompson, Craig; Clifford, Deana L.; Poppenga, Robert; Higley, J. Mark; Stephenson, Nicole; Jones, Megan; Keller, Stefan M.; Wengert, Greta M.; Gaffney, Patricia; Sweitzer, Rick A.; Sacks, Benjamin N.
    Area covered
    California
    Description

    The two factors in the final model were SEX (sex of the fisher) and POPN (population of fisher).

  17. K

    California 2020 Projected Urban Growth

    • koordinates.com
    csv, dwg, geodatabase +6
    Updated Oct 13, 2003
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    State of California (2003). California 2020 Projected Urban Growth [Dataset]. https://koordinates.com/layer/670-california-2020-projected-urban-growth/
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    geopackage / sqlite, mapinfo tab, kml, csv, mapinfo mif, geodatabase, dwg, pdf, shapefileAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 13, 2003
    Dataset authored and provided by
    State of California
    License

    https://koordinates.com/license/attribution-3-0/https://koordinates.com/license/attribution-3-0/

    Area covered
    Description

    20 year Projected Urban Growth scenarios. Base year is 2000. Projected year in this dataset is 2020.

    By 2020, most forecasters agree, California will be home to between 43 and 46 million residents-up from 35 million today. Beyond 2020 the size of California's population is less certain. Depending on the composition of the population, and future fertility and migration rates, California's 2050 population could be as little as 50 million or as much as 70 million. One hundred years from now, if present trends continue, California could conceivably have as many as 90 million residents.

    Where these future residents will live and work is unclear. For most of the 20th Century, two-thirds of Californians have lived south of the Tehachapi Mountains and west of the San Jacinto Mountains-in that part of the state commonly referred to as Southern California. Yet most of coastal Southern California is already highly urbanized, and there is relatively little vacant land available for new development. More recently, slow-growth policies in Northern California and declining developable land supplies in Southern California are squeezing ever more of the state's population growth into the San Joaquin Valley.

    How future Californians will occupy the landscape is also unclear. Over the last fifty years, the state's population has grown increasingly urban. Today, nearly 95 percent of Californians live in metropolitan areas, mostly at densities less than ten persons per acre. Recent growth patterns have strongly favored locations near freeways, most of which where built in the 1950s and 1960s. With few new freeways on the planning horizon, how will California's future growth organize itself in space? By national standards, California's large urban areas are already reasonably dense, and economic theory suggests that densities should increase further as California's urban regions continue to grow. In practice, densities have been rising in some urban counties, but falling in others.

    These are important issues as California plans its long-term future. Will California have enough land of the appropriate types and in the right locations to accommodate its projected population growth? Will future population growth consume ever-greater amounts of irreplaceable resource lands and habitat? Will jobs continue decentralizing, pushing out the boundaries of metropolitan areas? Will development densities be sufficient to support mass transit, or will future Californians be stuck in perpetual gridlock? Will urban and resort and recreational growth in the Sierra Nevada and Trinity Mountain regions lead to the over-fragmentation of precious natural habitat? How much water will be needed by California's future industries, farms, and residents, and where will that water be stored? Where should future highway, transit, and high-speed rail facilities and rights-of-way be located? Most of all, how much will all this growth cost, both economically, and in terms of changes in California's quality of life?

    Clearly, the more precise our current understanding of how and where California is likely to grow, the sooner and more inexpensively appropriate lands can be acquired for purposes of conservation, recreation, and future facility siting. Similarly, the more clearly future urbanization patterns can be anticipated, the greater our collective ability to undertake sound city, metropolitan, rural, and bioregional planning.

    Consider two scenarios for the year 2100. In the first, California's population would grow to 80 million persons and would occupy the landscape at an average density of eight persons per acre, the current statewide urban average. Under this scenario, and assuming that 10% percent of California's future population growth would occur through infill-that is, on existing urban land-California's expanding urban population would consume an additional 5.06 million acres of currently undeveloped land. As an alternative, assume the share of infill development were increased to 30%, and that new population were accommodated at a density of about 12 persons per acre-which is the current average density of the City of Los Angeles. Under this second scenario, California's urban population would consume an additional 2.6 million acres of currently undeveloped land. While both scenarios accommodate the same amount of population growth and generate large increments of additional urban development-indeed, some might say even the second scenario allows far too much growth and development-the second scenario is far kinder to California's unique natural landscape.

    This report presents the results of a series of baseline population and urban growth projections for California's 38 urban counties through the year 2100. Presented in map and table form, these projections are based on extrapolations of current population trends and recent urban development trends. The next section, titled Approach, outlines the methodology and data used to develop the various projections. The following section, Baseline Scenario, reviews the projections themselves. A final section, entitled Baseline Impacts, quantitatively assesses the impacts of the baseline projections on wetland, hillside, farmland and habitat loss.

  18. W

    American Indian or Alaska Native Race Alone and Multi-Race Population...

    • wifire-data.sdsc.edu
    geotiff, wcs, wms
    Updated Mar 25, 2025
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    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force (2025). American Indian or Alaska Native Race Alone and Multi-Race Population Concentration - Northern CA [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/clm-american-indian-or-alaska-native-race-alone-and-multi-race-population-concentration-northern-ca
    Explore at:
    geotiff, wcs, wmsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 25, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force
    License

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

    Area covered
    Alaska, California, Northern California, United States
    Description

    Relative concentration of the Northern California region's American Indian population. The variable AIANALN records all individuals who select American Indian or Alaska Native as their SOLE racial identity in response to the Census questionnaire, regardless of their response to the Hispanic ethnicity question. Both Hispanic and non-Hispanic in the Census questionnaire are potentially associated with American Indian / Alaska Native race alone. IMPORTANT: this self reported ancestry and Tribal membership are distinct identities and one does not automatically imply the other. These data should not be interpreted as a distribution of "Tribal people." Numerous Rancherias in the Northern California region account for the wide distribution of very to extremely high concentrations of American Indians outside the San Francisco Bay Area.

    "Relative concentration" is a measure that compares the proportion of population within each Census block group data unit that identify as American Indian / Alaska Native alone to the proportion of all people that live within the 1,207 block groups in the Northern California RRK region that identify as American Indian / Alaska native alone. Example: if 5.2% of people in a block group identify as AIANALN, the block group has twice the proportion of AIANALN individuals compared to the Northern California RRK region (2.6%), and more than three times the proportion compared to the entire state of California (1.6%). If the local proportion is twice the regional proportion, then AIANALN individuals are highly concentrated locally.

  19. North Highlands, CA, US Demographics 2025

    • point2homes.com
    html
    Updated 2025
    + more versions
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    Point2Homes (2025). North Highlands, CA, US Demographics 2025 [Dataset]. https://www.point2homes.com/US/Neighborhood/CA/North-Highlands-Demographics.html
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    htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Point2Homeshttps://plus.google.com/116333963642442482447/posts
    Time period covered
    2025
    Area covered
    North Highlands, California, United States
    Variables measured
    Asian, Other, White, 2 units, Over 65, Median age, Blue collar, Mobile home, 3 or 4 units, 5 to 9 units, and 71 more
    Description

    Comprehensive demographic dataset for North Highlands, CA, US including population statistics, household income, housing units, education levels, employment data, and transportation with year-over-year changes.

  20. TIGER/Line Shapefile, Current, State, California, 2020 Census Block

    • catalog.data.gov
    Updated Aug 9, 2025
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    U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Census Bureau, Geography Division (Point of Contact) (2025). TIGER/Line Shapefile, Current, State, California, 2020 Census Block [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/tiger-line-shapefile-current-state-california-2020-census-block
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 9, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    United States Census Bureauhttp://census.gov/
    Area covered
    California
    Description

    This resource is a member of a series. The TIGER/Line shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) System (MTS). The MTS represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line shapefile is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. Census blocks are statistical areas bounded on all sides by visible features, such as streets, roads, streams, and railroad tracks, and/or by nonvisible boundaries such as city, town, township, and county limits, and short line-of-sight extensions of streets and roads. Census blocks are relatively small in area; for example, a block in a city bounded by streets. However, census blocks in remote areas are often large and irregular and may even be many square miles in area. A common misunderstanding is that census blocks are used geographically to build all other census geographic areas, rather all other census geographic areas are updated and then used as the primary constraints, along with roads and water features, to delineate the tabulation blocks. As a result, all 2020 Census blocks nest within every other 2020 Census geographic area, so that Census Bureau statistical data can be tabulated at the block level and aggregated up to the appropriate geographic areas. Census blocks cover all territory in the United States, Puerto Rico, and the Island Areas (American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands). Blocks are the smallest geographic areas for which the Census Bureau publishes data from the decennial census. A block may consist of one or more faces.

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Link copied
Close
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California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force (2025). Black and African American Population Concentration - Northern CA [Dataset]. https://wifire-data.sdsc.edu/dataset/clm-black-and-african-american-population-concentration-northern-ca

Black and African American Population Concentration - Northern CA

Explore at:
geotiff, wms, wcsAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Mar 25, 2025
Dataset provided by
California Wildfire & Forest Resilience Task Force
License

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

Area covered
California, Northern California
Description

Relative concentration of the Northern California region's Hispanic/Latino population. The variable HISPANIC records all individuals who select Hispanic or Latino in response to the Census questionnaire, regardless of their response to the racial identity question.

"Relative concentration" is a measure that compares the proportion of population within each Census block group data unit that identify as Hispanic or LatinoAmerican Indian / Alaska Native alone to the proportion of all people that live within the 1,207 block groups in the Northern California RRK region that identify as Hispanic or LatinoAmerican Indian / Alaska native alone. Example: if 5.2% of people in a block group identify as HISPANIC, the block group has twice the proportion of HISPANIC individuals compared to the Northern California RRK region (2.6%), and more than three times the proportion compared to the entire state of California (1.6%). If the local proportion is twice the regional proportion, then HISPANIC individuals are highly concentrated locally.

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