Vegetation - Coachella Valley Floor [ds2898]

The University of California Riverside''s Center for Conservation Biology (CCB) has created fine-scale vegetation maps for a number of Conservation Areas under the jurisdiction of the Coachella Valley Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan (CVMSHCP) under contract with the Coachella Valley Conservation Commission (CVCC). The primary purpose for creating these maps is provide a landscape-scale approach to monitoring changes due to land use, invasive species, recreation, hydrology, and climate. These digital maps, documenting changes and their causes, are then tools for prioritizing future conservation actions. The vegetation classification follows Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) and National Vegetation Classification Standards (NVCS; Federal Geographic Data Committee 2008). The classification is meant to align with previous and concurrent efforts previous survey and classification work done by California Department of Fish and Wildlifes Vegetation Classification and Mapping Program (VegCaMP) and Aerial Information Systems (AIS) for the Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan Area as well as the southeastern Salton Sea Mid-Desert Area, and by the National Park Service for Joshua Tree National Park.This unit was mapped using the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) and California Natural Plant Society Combined (CNPS) Vegetation Classification and Mapping Program protocol (CNPS 2014). The primary purpose was to develop a dynamic and accurate vegetation map for the Coachella Valley Floor Reserve Management Unit, so that it may be applied to further conservation efforts and assist with management of the 27 species and 27 natural communities listed within the plan. Map polygons were assessed for vegetation type, percent cover, presence of exotics, anthropogenic disturbance, and roadedness. This map is an updated map for the year 2018 for the area within the 95,000 acres that fall within the 18 CVMSHCP Management Units on the Coachella “Valley Floor.” Within the study areas, rapid assessment protocol vegetation plots, basic vegetation assessment plots and supplemental reconnaissance observations were obtained within the study at pre-determined points in order to document the plant community, disturbances, and invasive species across space and types. Heads-up photo-interpretation of 2013 local flight true-color imagery and field information were combined to produce delineations of vegetation alliances and associations according to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife classification system, outlined in the Manual of California Vegetation (MCV) Second Edition (Sawyer et al.2009). Additional field data was collected in 2018 and incorporated into the 2018 map update. The 2018 map delineation was done by photo-interpretation of updated imagery, with a focus on stand changes, mortality, cover and land use changes, and other anthropogenic changes.To better focus on conservation of particular habitats, there are several alliances where the minimum mapping unit (MMU) is less than an acre; including Prosopis glandulosaWoodland Alliance (MMU .5 acres), and Washingtonia fillifera Shrubland Alliance(MMU .34 acres), as well as wetlands and certain wash types which displayed complexity that would necessitate delineation. In order to better delineate habitat for the aeolian suite of species covered under the Plan, the following provisional alliances were used: Dicoria canescens--Oenothera deltoides Sparsely Vegetated Active Dune Provisional Alliance; Larrea tridentata / Abronia villosa Stabilized Sand Fields Provisional Alliance; andPsorothamnus arboresens / Dicoria canescens Ephemeral Sand Fields Provisional Alliance.

Data and Resources

Field Value
accessLevel public
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identifier eb165edd-f377-46d3-bb38-bee310c7e61c
issued 2020-10-30T21:58:15.000Z
modified 2021-05-17T22:27:34.417Z
publisher California Department of Fish and Wildlife
resource-type Dataset
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Groups
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  • dunes
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  • ecosystem-functions
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  • landscape-management
  • national
  • north-america
  • terrestrial-ecosystems
  • united-states
  • vegetation
  • vegetation-cover
  • vegetation-species
isopen False
license_id notspecified
license_title License not specified
maintainer BIOS_Admin
maintainer_email bios@wildlife.ca.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-20T22:56:11.294905
metadata_modified 2025-11-20T22:56:11.294909
notes The University of California Riverside''s Center for Conservation Biology (CCB) has created fine-scale vegetation maps for a number of Conservation Areas under the jurisdiction of the Coachella Valley Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan (CVMSHCP) under contract with the Coachella Valley Conservation Commission (CVCC). The primary purpose for creating these maps is provide a landscape-scale approach to monitoring changes due to land use, invasive species, recreation, hydrology, and climate. These digital maps, documenting changes and their causes, are then tools for prioritizing future conservation actions. The vegetation classification follows Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) and National Vegetation Classification Standards (NVCS; Federal Geographic Data Committee 2008). The classification is meant to align with previous and concurrent efforts previous survey and classification work done by California Department of Fish and Wildlifes Vegetation Classification and Mapping Program (VegCaMP) and Aerial Information Systems (AIS) for the Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan Area as well as the southeastern Salton Sea Mid-Desert Area, and by the National Park Service for Joshua Tree National Park.This unit was mapped using the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) and California Natural Plant Society Combined (CNPS) Vegetation Classification and Mapping Program protocol (CNPS 2014). The primary purpose was to develop a dynamic and accurate vegetation map for the Coachella Valley Floor Reserve Management Unit, so that it may be applied to further conservation efforts and assist with management of the 27 species and 27 natural communities listed within the plan. Map polygons were assessed for vegetation type, percent cover, presence of exotics, anthropogenic disturbance, and roadedness. This map is an updated map for the year 2018 for the area within the 95,000 acres that fall within the 18 CVMSHCP Management Units on the Coachella “Valley Floor.” Within the study areas, rapid assessment protocol vegetation plots, basic vegetation assessment plots and supplemental reconnaissance observations were obtained within the study at pre-determined points in order to document the plant community, disturbances, and invasive species across space and types. Heads-up photo-interpretation of 2013 local flight true-color imagery and field information were combined to produce delineations of vegetation alliances and associations according to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife classification system, outlined in the Manual of California Vegetation (MCV) Second Edition (Sawyer et al.2009). Additional field data was collected in 2018 and incorporated into the 2018 map update. The 2018 map delineation was done by photo-interpretation of updated imagery, with a focus on stand changes, mortality, cover and land use changes, and other anthropogenic changes.To better focus on conservation of particular habitats, there are several alliances where the minimum mapping unit (MMU) is less than an acre; including Prosopis glandulosaWoodland Alliance (MMU .5 acres), and Washingtonia fillifera Shrubland Alliance(MMU .34 acres), as well as wetlands and certain wash types which displayed complexity that would necessitate delineation. In order to better delineate habitat for the aeolian suite of species covered under the Plan, the following provisional alliances were used: Dicoria canescens--Oenothera deltoides Sparsely Vegetated Active Dune Provisional Alliance; Larrea tridentata / Abronia villosa Stabilized Sand Fields Provisional Alliance; andPsorothamnus arboresens / Dicoria canescens Ephemeral Sand Fields Provisional Alliance.
num_resources 6
num_tags 30
title Vegetation - Coachella Valley Floor [ds2898]