Datasets

Data Availability Name Objective Description Dates
DownloadableAdirondack Park hiker origin data for 2012To link user origin data recorded at trail register books in the Adirondack Park, NY, to associated spatial cadastral data.These data were extracted from the Adirondack Trail Registry Database (ADK-TReD; Larkin 2017) (see Adirondack Park trail register data for 2012 dataset in this project). We linked visitor-reported ori
gin data recorded in trail register books to spatial cadastral data (Federal Information Processing Standards, FIPS). If the origin information and the FIPS data could not be matched, we examined the entry to determine if the reported origin was part of a larger town (e.g., boroughs of NYC) or a misspelling. If we could not determine the exact location of a visitor, we removed this entry.

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2019-08-01 to 2020-01-31
DownloadableAdirondack Park trail register data for 2012To examine hiker origin data for trail register books in the Adirondack Park, NY,These data are a subset of data housed in the Adirondack Trail Registry Database (ADK-TReD), which includes data from 210 trail register books from 2012 located at trailheads in the Adirondack Park. F
ields include group size, length of stay, and user days (defined as group size multiplied by the length of stay), as well as visitor origin information (location of residence). Only entries with valid origin data and those orginating from the states of Connecticut (CT), Massachusetts (MA), Maine (ME), New Hampshire (NH), New Jersey (NJ), New York (NY), Pennsylvania (PA), Rhode Island (RI), and Vermont (VT) are included in this dataset.

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2019-08-01 to 2020-01-31
DownloadableAdirondack Park trail registry informationTo provide information on trail register locations in Adirondack Park, NY.This dataset includes names and information for trail registry locations in Adirondack Park, NY. 2019-08-01 to 2020-01-31
DownloadableInvasive plant observationsTo compile all invasive plant observations to assess potential transfer risk.Invasive plant observation locations were extracted from three databases: (1) iNaturalist research-grade observations (GBIF 2019), (2) EDDMapS (University of Georgia Center for Invasive Species and Ec
osystem Health 2019), and (3) iMapInvasives (NatureServe 2019). Each entry was updated with the currently-accepted and previously-accepted scientific names based from ITIS (2019). Previously-accepted scientific names were retained in the case that an invasive plant record was collected using that name. All common names were also retained. We selected only observations made prior to 2012 from states of CT, MA, ME, NH, NJ, NY, PA, RI, VT.

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2019-08-01 to 2020-01-31
DownloadableInvasive plant transfer risk scoresTo link invasive plant observations summed by town, coupled with the visitor origins and trailhead destinations to examine the possible risk of plant transfer to trailheads in the Adirondack Park. Following the methods of Rockefeller (2016), we computed a transfer risk potential per invasive species per trailhead. For each trailhead, we computed the total number of visitors per town by summing
the group size in origin data by town and trail register. Using these data, we computed a trail-town exposure score: the amount of potential exposure per species to each trailhead per town. We computed this score by multiplying the species’ total number of observations per town and the number of visitors per town. From these values, we computed a raw total exposure potential per species per trailhead by summing the trail-town exposure score across all towns. We log-transformed the raw total exposure score due to its skewed distribution and then normalized these values based on a pooled distribution of the scores across all trailheads. This resulted in transfer risk potential score per species per trailhead. It can be interpreted as the relative risk of that invasive plant species being inadvertently transported to that location.

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2019-08-01 to 2020-01-31