Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Assessment of habitat of wildlife communities on the Snake River, Jackson, Wyoming

January 1, 1992

The composition of the wildlife community in western riparian habitats is influenced by the horizontal and vertical distribution of vegetation, the physical complexity of the channel, and barriers to movement along the corridor. Based on information from the literature and a workshop, a model was developed to evaluate the wildlife community along the Snake River near Jackson, Wyoming. The model compares conditions of the current or future years with conditions in 1956, before constructions of levees along the river. Conditions in 1956 are assumed to approximate the desirable distribution of plant cover types and the associated wildlife community and are used as a standard of comparison in the model. The model may be applied with remotely sensed data and is compatible with a geographic information systems analysis. In addition to comparing existing or future conditions with conditions in 1956, the model evaluated floodplain and channel complexity and assesses anthropogenic disturbance and its potential effect on the quality of wildlife habitat and movements of wildlife in the riparian corridor.

Publication Year 1992
Title Assessment of habitat of wildlife communities on the Snake River, Jackson, Wyoming
Authors Richard L. Schroeder, Arthur W. Allen
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype Other Report
Index ID 70127046
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse