PS 15
Spatial Analysis And GIS

Monday, August 11, 2014: 4:30 PM-6:30 PM
Exhibit Hall, Sacramento Convention Center
Evaluating the importance of scale and variable selection when modeling rare and endangered plants in regions with rugged topography
Corey M. Rovzar, University of California, Los Angeles; Thomas W. Gillespie, University of California, Los Angeles
Delaunay tesselation as a scale-free description of spatial aggregation: How to minimize edge-effect problems
James V. Andrews, University of North Carolina Wilmington; J. Wilson White, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Wildlife connectivity from the Central Valley to the Sierra Nevada Mountains
Crystal M. Krause, California Department of Fish and Wildlife; Melanie Gogol-Prokurat, California Department of Fish and Wildlife; Simon Bisrat, California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Tablet-assisted collection and mapping of human disturbance activities across complex social-ecological landscapes
Scott T. Yabiku, Arizona State University; Sharon J. Hall, Arizona State University; Abigail M. York, Arizona State University; Jennifer E. Glick, Arizona State University; Dirgha J. Ghimire, University of Michigan
Variation in the abundance and distribution of Spanish moss (Tillandsia usneoides) in different forest communities
Corey Devin Anderson, Valdosta State University; Bianca Stephania Farley, Valdosta State University
Landscape level influences on pond-breeding amphibian diversity in Minnesota's three ecoregions
Kelsie L. Becklin, Anoka Ramsey Community College; Kristen S. Genet, Anoka Ramsey Community College; David Marsh, Washington & Lee University; Kara Curtain, George Mason University
See more of: Contributed Posters