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Insect and Diseases Related Web Links
The Division of Forestry works closely with the U.S. Forest Service,
State & Private Forestry. The USFS Forest Health Highlights
site also has information on Alaskan insects, diseases, bibliography
listing, and links to other Forest Health sites. The section presents a program
overview, personnel information, current forest insect and disease conditions
throughout the state, forest insect and disease biology, control, impacts,
Sbexpert software and other Forest Health issues. This page is periodically
updated and is a good source of information on Alaska Forest Health issues.
A link to the 2001 revised U.S. Forest Service, State & Private Forestry
publication "Insects &
Diseases of Alaskan Forests" is also now available from this site. The
handbook was last revised in October 1987.
The Forest Health Monitoring Clearinghouse provides special resource databases
of forest health related information to land managers, scientists, and the
general public. Fourteen statewide data layers are available for downloading,
including Vegetation/land cover, ECOMAP and Ecoregions, Wetlands Inventory,
Timber Harvest and other disturbances, Yearly Insect and Disease Damage,
Fire History, Fire Protection Zones, Fire Management Boundaries, Fire Fuels
Models, Land Status/Ownership, Elevation, Hydrography, Soils, and Permafrost.
This is the State of Alaska, Department of Natural Resources' Geographic
Data Clearinghouse site that is directly patterned and linked to the AGDC
site maintained at the U. S. Geological Survey, EROS (Earth Resource Observation
Satellite) field office in Anchorage--SEE AGDC link below. The State of
Alaska-maintained section of this site contains data layers information in
the form of metadata, or "data about the data", that describe the content,
quality, condition, and other characteristics of the data. The metadata is
compliant with federal geographic data committee (FGDC) standards. For example,
data on land status, transportation, physical boundaries-such as coastline,
conservation units, etc., and links to state resource information (e.g.,
forest pest damage surveys, Exxon Valdez restoration data, CIIMMS) and links
to other agency forest pest and forest health information and data can be
found here. The site is not complete since statewide participation for data
submission and access links does not exist at this time, however, the goal
is to make this a clearinghouse node for state and local agencies. One example
of a clearinghouse node, which does presently exist for data about the Kenai
Peninsula that has fairly complete agency participation, is the CIIMMS (Cook
Inlet Information Management & Monitoring System) site that can be found
at http://www.dec.state.ak.us/ciimms/
The Interagency Forest Ecology Study Team (INFEST) home-page. This site
has ecological information pertaining to wildlife and forests, spruce bark
beetle, basic silvics, and other Alaska ecosystem considerations.
The National Forest Health Monitoring Home Page. Forest Health Monitoring
is a national program administered by the U.S. Forest Service and member
states. FHM is designed to determine the status, changes, and trends in
indicators of forest condition on an annual basis. The State of Alaska provides
information to the program, including its annual forest pest damage database,
but is not yet a formal member. Links can also be found on this site to other
forest health data and program contacts for USFS regional offices and the
states that have provided data to the program.
Kenai Peninsula Borough Spruce Bark Beetle Web Site. This site supplies
a direct link to the Kenai Peninsula Borough's Ecosystem Level Vegetation
Mapping Initiative (ELVMI). This initiative is a vegetation mapping project
to provide detailed vegetation mapping information to support fire risk
and hazard management in the aftermath of a major spruce beetle epidemic
on the Kenai Peninsula. The site gives a progress update on the mapping
project, which is designed to produce a forest health/hazard map and GIS
data base.
A site maintained by the University of Georgia on forest and urban pests,
including a good section on bark beetles. This is just one example of some
of the insect and disease information resources that can be found on the
World Wide Web.
The Alaska Geospatial Data Clearinghouse is a component of the National
Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI). The Clearinghouse provides a pathway
to find geospatial referenced data and associated metadata. The site is a
link to data available from a multiple of federal, state and local agencies.
The site is currently administered at the U.S. Geological Survey, EROS field
office in Anchorage. From this website the Forest Health Monitoring Clearinghouse
can be reached.
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