Georgia Rare Species and Natural Community Information - Introduction to Available Nongame Conservation DataWelcome to the Nongame Conservation Section data center. Here you will find rare species and natural community data mainatained by our section. *** Please Read This First (Latest downloads are here!) ***Note: due to circumstances relating to getting a new web content management system (CMS), many of the lists in pages linked from this page are several years old. Our new CMS is schedualed be implimented sometime in late 2009, but if you need the latest data concerning names, ranks and status of rare species please download the PDF versions of our Special Concern Animal List, Special Concern Plant List and Plant Watch List, updated July 31, 2009. For current locations of rare species by quarter quad or county please download the following GIS shapefile, updated October 2009. Commonly Requested Data
Sending Us Locations of Rare Species and Significant Natural Communities
The Plant Watch ListOur plant watch list contains plant species of lesser conservation concern. These are species for which we are gathering information but not adding population locations to the databases. None of these species are protected so they do not have data columns for state and federal protection. For printable PDF version see the following. PDF Versions of Animal and Plant Special Concern List and Plant Tracking List Useful for Compact PrintingNow available are PDF versions of our Special Concern Animal List, Special Concern Plant List and Plant Watch List. These are formatted to save paper when printing. Updated July 31, 2009. Convert Web Lists Into Database TablesLists in Web (HTML) tables on this site and many other Web sites can easily be converted into database tables. Copy and paste (or open) the Web page containing the list into into MS Excel. In Excel select the rows and columns you want to convert into a database table. Make sure to select the header row with the field names (remember dbase field names must only be 10 characters long). Use "File/Save As" to save the data into dBASE IV format. Most (if not all) databases can import dBase IV files as database tables. You can also use ODBC to link your database to the excel table if it is set up like a database table. Contact informationContact information for our staff can be found in the NatureServe Network Staff Directory. Our new address is: Georgia Department of Natural Resources
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