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Featured researches published by Paul B. Leonard.


Methods in Ecology and Evolution | 2017

gflow: software for modelling circuit theory‐based connectivity at any scale

Paul B. Leonard; Edward B. Duffy; Robert F. Baldwin; Brad H. McRae; Viral B. Shah; Tanmay Mohapatra

Summary Increasing habitat connectivity is important for mitigating the effects of climate change, landscape fragmentation and habitat loss for biodiversity conservation. However, modelling connectivity at the relevant scales over which these threats occur has been limited by computational requirements. Here, we introduce the open-source software gflow, which massively parallelizes the computation of circuit theory-based connectivity. The software is developed for high-performance computing, but scales to consumer-grade desktop computers running modern Linux or Mac OS X operating systems. We report high computational efficiency representing a 173× speedup over existing software using high-performance computing and a 8·4× speedup using a desktop computer while drastically reducing memory requirements. gflow allows large-extent and high-resolution connectivity problems to be calculated over many iterations and at multiple scales. We envision gflow being immediately useful for large-landscape efforts, including climate-driven animal range shifts, multitaxa connectivity, and for the many developing use-cases of circuit theory-based connectivity.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Interacting Social and Environmental Predictors for the Spatial Distribution of Conservation Lands.

Robert F. Baldwin; Paul B. Leonard

Conservation decisions should be evaluated for how they meet conservation goals at multiple spatial extents. Conservation easements are land use decisions resulting from a combination of social and environmental conditions. An emerging area of research is the evaluation of spatial distribution of easements and their spatial correlates. We tested the relative influence of interacting social and environmental variables on the spatial distribution of conservation easements by ownership category and conservation status. For the Appalachian region of the United States, an area with a long history of human occupation and complex land uses including public-private conservation, we found that settlement, economic, topographic, and environmental data associated with spatial distribution of easements (N = 4813). Compared to random locations, easements were more likely to be found in lower elevations, in areas of greater agricultural productivity, farther from public protected areas, and nearer other human features. Analysis of ownership and conservation status revealed sources of variation, with important differences between local and state government ownerships relative to non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and among U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) GAP program status levels. NGOs were more likely to have easements nearer protected areas, and higher conservation status, while local governments held easements closer to settlement, and on lands of greater agricultural potential. Logistic interactions revealed environmental variables having effects modified by social correlates, and the strongest predictors overall were social (distance to urban area, median household income, housing density, distance to land trust office). Spatial distribution of conservation lands may be affected by geographic area of influence of conservation groups, suggesting that multi-scale conservation planning strategies may be necessary to satisfy local and regional needs for reserve networks. Our results support previous findings and provide an ecoregion-scale view that conservation easements may provide, at local scales, conservation functions on productive, more developable lands. Conservation easements may complement functions of public protected areas but more research should examine relative landscape-level ecological functions of both forms of protection.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Landscape-scale conservation design across biotic realms: sequential integration of aquatic and terrestrial landscapes

Paul B. Leonard; Robert F. Baldwin; R. Daniel Hanks

Systematic conservation planning has been used extensively throughout the world to identify important areas for maintaining biodiversity and functional ecosystems, and is well suited to address large-scale biodiversity conservation challenges of the twenty-first century. Systematic planning is necessary to bridge implementation, scale, and data gaps in a collaborative effort that recognizes competing land uses. Here, we developed a conservation planning process to identify and unify conservation priorities around the central and southern Appalachian Mountains as part of the Appalachian Landscape Conservation Cooperative (App LCC). Through a participatory framework and sequential, cross-realm integration in spatial optimization modeling we highlight lands and waters that together achieve joint conservation goals from LCC partners for the least cost. This process was driven by a synthesis of 26 multi-scaled conservation targets and optimized for simultaneous representation inside the program Marxan to account for roughly 25% of the LCC geography. We identify five conservation design elements covering critical ecological processes and patterns including interconnected regions as well as the broad landscapes between them. Elements were then subjected to a cumulative threats index for possible prioritization. The evaluation of these elements supports multi-scaled decision making within the LCC planning community through a participatory, dynamic, and iterative process.


Forest Ecology and Management | 2012

Remote detection of small wetlands in the Atlantic coastal plain of North America: Local relief models, ground validation, and high-throughput computing

Paul B. Leonard; Robert F. Baldwin; Jessica A. Homyack; T.B. Wigley


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2012

The missing wetlands: using local ecological knowledge to find cryptic ecosystems

Amber L. Pitt; Robert F. Baldwin; Donald J. Lipscomb; Bryan L. Brown; Joanna Hawley; Cora M. Allard-Keese; Paul B. Leonard


Animal Conservation | 2017

Landscape connectivity losses due to sea level rise and land use change

Paul B. Leonard; R. W. Sutherland; Robert F. Baldwin; D. A. Fedak; R. G. Carnes; A. P. Montgomery


Landscape and Urban Planning | 2014

High-throughput computing provides substantial time savings for landscape and conservation planning

Paul B. Leonard; Robert F. Baldwin; Edward B. Duffy; Donald J. Lipscomb; Adam M. Rose


BioScience | 2018

The Future of Landscape Conservation

Robert F. Baldwin; Stephen C. Trombulak; Paul B. Leonard; Reed Noss; Jodi Hilty; Hugh P. Possingham; Lynn Scarlett; Mark G. Anderson


Archive | 2012

REMOTE DETECTION OF EPHEMERAL WETLANDS IN MID- ATLANTIC COASTAL PLAIN ECOREGIONS: LIDAR AND HIGH-THROUGHPUT COMPUTING

Paul B. Leonard


Archive | 2018

Understanding Landscape Influences on Aquatic Fauna across the Central and Southern Appalachians

Richard Daniel Hanks; Paul B. Leonard; Robert F. Baldwin

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Amber L. Pitt

Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania

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D. A. Fedak

Colorado State University

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