nynhp.orgNew York Natural Heritage Program - NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation
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Keywords:Natural Heritage Program, rare plant, rare animal, flora, fauna, ecology, natural communities, ecological communities, rare species, threatened, endangered, special concern, unique, habitat, wildlife, biodiversity...
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nynhp.org Keywords accounting
Keyword |
Count |
Natural Heritage Program | 8 |
rare plant | 7 |
rare animal | 6 |
flora | 1 |
fauna | 1 |
ecology | 1 |
natural communities | 6 |
ecological communities | 1 |
rare species | 5 |
threatened | 1 |
endangered | 1 |
special concern | 1 |
unique | 0 |
habitat | 0 |
wildlife | 2 |
biodiversity | 10 |
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 Skip to content Your browser does not support iFrames Navigation menu Department of Environmental Conservation Recreation Destinations Freshwater Fishing Hunting and Trapping Marine Fishing and Shellfishing Camping Hiking Boating and Paddling Other Outdoor Adventures Nature Animals and Fish Forests and Trees Invasive Species Waterbodies Water Withdrawal and Floods Climate Change Maps Prevent & Control Pollution Waste and Recycling Petroleum and Chemical Storage Site Cleanup Water Air Pesticides Oil & Gas Wells and Mining Regulatory Regulations Permits and Licenses Environmental Assessment Hearings Public Protection and Enforcement Environmental Justice Guidance and Policy Documents News & Learning Press Releases Environmental Notice Bulletin Conservationist Magazine Kids and Teachers Classes and Training Help for Businesses Living Green Search Enter Search Term(s): Search DEC Home » Animals, Plants, Aquatic Life » Biodiversity & Species Conservation » New York Natural Heritage Program Skip to main navigation New York Natural Heritage Program Our mission is to facilitate conservation of New York's biodiversity by providing comprehensive information and scientific expertise on rare species and natural ecosystems to resource managers and other conservation partners. Announcing New Online Rare Species Reporting Form Our new online species reporting form is now available! We welcome your observations. Learn How You Can Contribute Data . New Rare Plant Status List 2019 New York Rare Plant Status Lists (PDF) March 2019 lists of rare plants of New York State with their rarity status and counties of occurrence. This document also contains rare plant phenology lists. New Rare Animal Status List Rare Animal List (PDF) lists rare animal species actively inventoried by the NY Natural Heritage Program as of October 2017. This list includes legal protection status and rarity ranks. Also see the official NYS list of threatened, endangered, and special concern wildlife species. Facilitating Conservation of New York's Biodiversity NY supports 10 populations of the federally listed Northern Monk's-hood (Aconitum noveboracense). Photo by Stephen M. Young. The NY Natural Heritage Program is a partnership between the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) and the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. Our mission is to facilitate conservation of rare animals, rare plants, and natural ecosystems, which we commonly refer to as "natural communities." We accomplish this mission by working collaboratively with partners inside and outside New York to support stewardship of New York's rare plants, rare animals, and significant natural communities, and to reduce the threat of invasive species to native ecosystems. We combine thorough field inventories, scientific analyses, expert interpretation, and comprehensive databases on New York's flora and fauna to deliver quality information to partners working in natural resource conservation. The end result of our actions will be more compatible management activities around our most imperiled species, ecosystems, and high-quality natural areas, in order to have significant and lasting effects on the preservation of New York's biodiversity. Our program was established in 1985 and is a contract unit housed within NYSDEC's Division of Fish and Wildlife. We are staffed by 25 scientists and specialists with expertise in ecology, zoology, botany, information management, and geographic information systems. Building and Maintaining the Most Comprehensive Database on New York's Imperiled Biodiversity In partnership with NYSDEC and a large number of experts and volunteers across the state, NY Natural Heritage is compiling a statewide atlas of dragonflies and damselflies. Russet-tipped clubtail (Stylurus plagiatus) photo by Jesse W. Jaycox. NY Natural Heritage maintains New York's most comprehensive database on the status and location of rare species and natural communities. We presently monitor 179 natural community types, 802 rare plant species, and 466 rare animal species across New York. We keep track of more than 12,800 locations where these species and communities are found. The database also includes detailed information on the relative rareness of each species and community, the quality of their occurrences, and descriptions of sites. The information is used by public agencies, the environmental conservation community, developers, and others to aid in land-use decisions. Our data are essential for prioritizing those species and communities in need of protection and for guiding land-use and land-management decisions where these species and communities exist. Exploring New York, from Sea-level Salt Marshes to Alpine Meadows NY Natural Heritage biologists work statewide to document important elements of biodiversity, as in this mature beech-maple mesic forest on the Tug Hill Plateau (top) and globally rare inland Atlantic white cedar swamp in southeastern NY (bottom). Photos by Tim Howard. In 1990, NY Natural Heritage published Ecological Communities of New York State , an all inclusive classification of natural and human-influenced communities. From 40,000-acre beech-maple mesic forests to 40-acre maritime beech forests, salt marshes to alpine meadows, our classification quickly became the primary source for natural community classification in New York. It is a fundamental reference for natural community classifications in the northeastern United States and southeastern Canada. This classification has been continually updated as we gather new field data. It has also been incorporated into the National Vegetation Classification System that is being developed and refined by NatureServe, The Nature Conservancy, and Natural Heritage Programs throughout the United States (including New York). NY Natural Heritage tracks the known locations of rare natural community types (such as inland Atlantic white cedar swamp in southeastern NY) and the state's best examples of common types (such as shrub swamps). Natural Heritage Programs and Conservation Data Centers (shown in gold) work together throughout the Western Hemisphere. Map by NatureServe. Placing New York's Species and Ecosystems in Context - From Local to Global NY Natural Heritage is an active participant in NatureServe - the international network of biodiversity data centers. There are currently Natural Heritage Programs in all 50 states and several interstate regions. There are also 21 Conservation Data Centers, the international equivalent of Natural Heritage Programs, in Canada, Latin America, and South America. These programs work with NatureServe to develop biodiversity data, maintain compatible standards for data management, and provide information about rare species and natural communities that is consistent across many geographic scales - from ¼-acre wetland sites to the North American continent. NY Natural Heritage's collaboration with NatureServe and other states helps us put our information into a broader context. With NatureServe, we track the rarity of species and natural communities at global and state scales. This allows us to distinguish the conservation priority for plant with just a few populations in the world with another plant with a few populations in New York but many populations elsewhere. We can also pool our data to look across state and international lines. For example, New York data on rare species and natural communities along Lake Ontario have been combined with similar data from Canada to facilitate analyses of potential consequences of lake-level changes. Our information is also being combined with data from neighboring states. It helps us understand the significance of our best biodiversity sites relative to similar systems in southeastern Canada, New England, the Mid-Atlantic states, and other Great Lakes states. Assessing New York's Biodiversity NY Natural Heritage data provide a pi...
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