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 Map Index for Statewide Aerial Surveys

2008 Forest Damage

Aerial Survey Poster

GIS Data - prior years

Draft GIS Data - 2008

The graphic below illustrates areas flown during cooperative aerial surveys conducted by Forest Health Protection staffs of the Alaska Region Forest Service and the Alaska Division of Forestry.  Individual quads highlighted in orange are where some amount of forest pest damage was mapped. The orange quads link to a detailed damage map.  

CLICK ORANGE QUAD TO LOAD MAP - BE PATIENT

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Each map is a 1 to 4 MB pdf file. These files are best viewed with Adobe Acrobat Reader Version 5.0 or newer. While the file loads the screen may blink or be blank. Please be patient.

quad map Icy Bay Bethel Craig Ketchikan Bradfield canal petersburg Port Alexander Anchorage Cordova Sumdum sitka Taku River Juneau Mt Fairweather Skagway Yakutat Kenai Lake Clark Taylor Mtns Dillingham Illiamna Naknek Mt Katmai Seldovia Tyonek Talkeetna McGrath Mt McKinley Nulato Ruby Kantishna River Melozitna Tanana shungnak Hughes Bettles Survey Pass Seward Valdez McCarthy Talkeetna Mtns Gulkana Nabesna Healy Unalakleet Norton Bay Christian Coleen Beaver Fort Yukon Black River Livengood Fairbanks Circle Big Delta Mt Hayes Charley River Eagle Tanacross Baird Mtns Holy Cross Russian Mission Ambler River Bering Glacier Lime HillsSleepmuteIditarodOphir Medfra Blying Sound Bendeleben Candle Selawik Noatak Kotzebue Wiseman Kateel River

How Aerial Surveys Are Conducted...


Data represented on these maps are based on aerial observations manually recorded onto a map. This procedure is considered both an art form and a form of scientific data collection, and is highly subjective. An observer only has a few seconds to recognize the color difference between healthy and damaged trees of different species; diagnose causal agents correctly; estimate intensity; delineate the extent of damage; and precisely record this information on a georeferenced map. Air turbulence, cloud shadows, distance from aircraft, haze, smoke, and observer experience can all affect the quality of the survey. These data summaries provide an estimate of conditions on the ground and may differ from estimates derived by other methods. Aerial surveys provide information on the current status for many causal agents, and are important when examining insect activity trends by comparing historical and current survey data over large areas.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Note:

In the digital data all insect and disease activity has an intensity attribute. Agents typically resulting in defoliation or discoloration are attributed with a high (H), medium (M) or low (L).

Agents typically resulting in mortality are attributed with a tree per acre estimate. Digital data and metadata can be found at the following URLs: http://agdc.usgs.gov/data/projects/fhm/

The following codes are used to indicated damage causal agent in the map quads above.

agents mapped in 2008

pest acres
CODE AGENT ACRES
ADL Alder decline 14,964
ALD Alder defoliation 628
ALM Aspen Leaf Miner 210,234
ALR Alder leafroller 74
ASD Aspen defoliation 2,273
BHB Black-headed budworm 2,757
BID Birch defoliation 67
CDL Cedar decline 9,106
CLB Cottonwood leaf beetle 139
CLM Cottonwood leaf miner 7,989
CWD Cottonwood defoliation 5,044
FLO Flooding/high-water damage 2,858
FRB Sub Alpine Fir Beetle 6
HKM Hemlock Mortality 2,035
IPB IPS and SPB 15,751
IPS Ips engraver beetle 43,875
LAB Larch beetle 159
LAS Larch sawfly 177
LAT Large aspen tortrix 7,184
PGR Western Gall Rust on Pine 4,118
POD Porcupine damage 1,189
SBW Spruce budworm 6,093
SLD Landslide/Avalanche 653
SMB Spear-marked black moth 53
SNA Spruce needle aphid 311
SNR Spruce needle rust 517
SPB Spruce beetle 69,500
SUV Sunira Verberata 68
WID Willow defoliation 4,432
WLM Willow Leafblotch Miner 72,382
WTH Windthrow/Blowdown 392

****DISCLAIMER*****


Due to the nature of aerial surveys, the data on this map will only provide rough estimates of location, intensity and the resulting trend information for agents detectable from the air. Many of the most destructive diseases are not represented on this map because these agents are not detectable from aerial surveys. The data presented on this map should only be used as a partial indicator of insect and disease activity, and should be validated on the ground for actual location and casual agent. Shaded areas show locations where tree mortality or defoliation were apparent from the air. Intensity of damage is variable and not all trees in shaded areas are dead or defoliated.
The insect and disease data represented on this map are available digitally from the USDA Forest Service, Region Ten Forest Health Protection group. The cooperators reserve the right to correct, update, modify or replace GIS products. Using this map for purposes other than those for which it was intended may yield inaccurate or misleading
results.