Scoring Habitats
The Habitats WatchList uses seven criteria to evaluate the threat level a habitat is currently experiencing:
- Bird Conservation Concern – Obligates and Strong Indicator Species in the habitat are scored based on their appearance on the Endangered Species Act (ESA; U.S.), Species at Risk Act (SARA; Canada),IUCN Red List (global), and Birds of Conservation Concern 2021. The higher the score, the more threatened the habitat’s Indicator Species are.
- Number of Indicator Species – A higher score shows more Obligate and Strong Indicator Species are present, making the habitat more valuable to birds.
- Extent – Habitats with smaller areas are more threatened than larger ones. Higher scores correspond with smaller habitats.
- Protection – Habitats with smaller proportions of protected areas are more threatened; scores are higher for those with less protected area.
- Likelihood of Conversion – Habitats that are more likely to be converted to another habitat type through agriculture, development, or other means are more threatened and scored higher.
- Landscape Condition – Habitats in poor condition are more threatened and thus scored higher.
- Climate – Habitats more threatened by climate change are scored higher.
A weighted sum of the scores on these seven factors can range from 10 to 100, with higher values indicating a greater level of threat to a given habitat. The highest-scoring habitats are added to the Red WatchList or Yellow WatchList, representing the habitats most at risk and requiring conservation action.
Technical Details
Definitions
Indicator Species: Bird species that are characteristic of a particular habitat and which only occur in that habitat or in a few similar habitats. Indicator Species tend to be specialists on one or a few aspects of a habitat.
Threatened Birds:Indicator Species that appear as Endangered or Threatened under the U.S. Endangered Species Act, as Endangered or Threatened under the Canadian Species at Risk Act, or in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Birds of Conservation Concern 2021 list.
Details on Scoring System
Bird Conservation Concern: Obligate and Strong Indicator Species are scored based on whether they appear on one or more of these four lists of threatened species. The score is further weighted by the level of threat (whether the species is listed as Endangered or Threatened).
- Endangered Species Act (ESA; United States)
- Endangered: 6 points
- Threatened: 3 points
- Species At Risk Act (SARA; Canada)
- Endangered: 6 points
- Threatened: 3 points
- IUCN Red List (Global)
- Critically Endangered: 3 points
- Endangered: 2 points
- Vulnerable: 1 point
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Bird Species of Conservation Concern 2021
If an Obligate or Strong Indicator Species did not appear on any of these lists, it received no points. If a species appears on more than one of the lists, it receives the total for the score on each list. Therefore, species such as Whooping Crane, which appears as Endangered on both the ESA and SARA, Endangered on the IUCN Red List, and on the USFWS Bird Species of Conservation Concern list, receives 15 points for those habitats in which it is an Indicator Species.
Indicator Species that appear on one of these lists for only part of their range are scored only for those habitats where they are Indicator Species and also listed as some level of conservation concern.
Indicator Bird Species Score: For each habitat, each Obligate species is scored 6 points and Strong Indicator Bird species are scored 3 points. Therefore, a habitat with one Obligate and three Strong Indicator Species is given a score of 12 points.
Extent Score: The area of each habitat in square kilometers.
Protection Score: The proportion of each habitat that is in GAP Status Code 1 and 2 protected areas (USGS Gap Analysis Project) and IUCN Protected Area Management Category I-VII (Canadian Protected and Conserved Areas Database).
Likelihood of Conversion Score: This score is calculated from the Land Cover Vulnerability Change (LCVC) dataset and indicates the chance that a habitat will be converted to another habitat type, potentially through development or agriculture.
Landscape Condition Score: Based on NatureServe’s Landscape Condition Model, this score assesses the physical condition of landscapes; habitats with landscapes in poorer condition are more threatened and thus are scored higher.
Climate Score: A metric developed by NatureServe that measures a habitat’s vulnerability to climate change impacts; habitats more threatened by climate change are scored higher. This score is based on average climate velocity (i.e., rate of adaptation needed for species to remain in suitable climate envelopes), as calculated by AdaptWest (North America) and Chelsa Climate (Hawaii).
Calculation of Scores from Decile Codes
Each of the seven measures produces a raw value. These values are sorted and converted to deciles coded from 1-10, with higher values indicating greater importance of the habitat. Higher values for most of the measures (four measures) are given higher scores. For three measures, however, this is reversed: lower values receive higher scores. These are:
- Extent (habitats with smaller extents are more threatened)
- Protection (habitats with lower proportions of the extent in protected areas are more threatened)
- Landscape Condition (habitats with lower condition, that is, poorer condition, are more threatened)
Decile values for four of the measures were further weighted:
- Extent (decile value x 1.5)
- Bird Conservation Concern (decile value x 2)
- Likelihood of Conversion (decile value x 2)
- Protection (decile value x 1.5)
The remaining three measures (Indicator Bird Species, Landscape Condition, and Climate) were not weighted; only their decile rank is used.
The sum of the scores of the seven measures, therefore, can range from 10 to 100, with higher values indicating higher threat to the habitat. This value is the Overall Threat Score.
Overall Threat Scores 68 or higher are listed as Red Habitats WatchList. Overall Threat Scores higher than 62 but less than 68 are listed as Yellow Habitats WatchList.
Eleven habitats are mapped but not scored. These are strictly marine habitats and human-made habitats.
- Atlantic Pelagic Waters
- Arctic Pelagic Waters
- Pacific Pelagic Waters
- Atlantic Coral Reefs
- Pacific Coral Reefs
- Nearctic Seagrass Beds
- General Agriculture
- North American Pastureland and Rangeland
- Nearctic Tree Plantations
- Suburban
- Urban