{ "culture": "en-US", "name": "Citrus", "guid": "", "catalogPath": "", "snippet": "This image service depicts a Use Data Layer (UDL) that represents agricultural pesticide uses on Citrus crops as used by US EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP) in endangered species risk assessments.", "description": "This image service depicts a Use Data Layer (UDL) that represents agricultural pesticide uses on crops as used by US EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP) in endangered species risk assessments. These UDLs represent anywhere specific pesticide uses could be applied based on a pesticide label, and not where pesticides are currently being used. UDLs generated using a number of national data sources including but not limited to United State Department of Agriculture's Cropland Data Layer, United State Geological Survey (USGS) National Landcover Database and National Oceanic & Atmospheric Organization (NOAA) Coastal Change Analysis Program. Updated routinely, this snapshot represents the data currently used by OPP.\n\nThe Endangered Species Act (ESA) provides a program for the conservation of threatened and endangered species and the habitats in which they are found. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and the National Marine Fisheries Service of U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Organization (NMFS/NOAA) lead federal implementation of the ESA, though they are supported by other federal agencies, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA), as part of the Section 7 consultation process. Section 7 of the ESA directs all Federal agencies to conserve endangered and threatened species and to use their authorities to ensure actions do not jeopardized the further existence of threatened and endangered species or adversely modify designated critical habitats. As part of the Section 7 consultation, Federal agencies work with USFWS and NMFS to identify species found within the jurisdiction of the United States that could be affected by actions carried out by the agency.\n\nThe US EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP) is responsible for ensuring that Agency actions under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) are in compliance with ESA. OPP determines if ESA-listed species or their designated critical habitat may be affected by pesticide products. Pesticide products that \"may affect\" an ESA-listed species or its designated critical habitat may be subject to additional regulation.\n\nUse Data Layers (UDLs) represent the potential pesticide application sites for agricultural and non-agricultural label uses and associated potential off-site impact areas. These UDLs supports the section 7 consultation process in the overlap analysis that identifies species found on or near these potential pesticide use locations. Generated from many different land cover and land use datasets, several methods have been employed to ensure sufficient accuracy and conservatism for decision making. All UDLs include off-site areas. Off-site areas are not directly applied by pesticides but could be impacted following application through spray drift or run-off. These areas are delineated by distance from the closest source use site from any direction. Several raster functions are available to symbolize the UDLs based on different off-site distances of interest. These include:\n\nUse Site: Distances included (in meters)\n0: Field or Use Site\nLimited Extent: Distances included (in meters)\n0: Field or Use Site\n30: Directly adjacent / runoff to terrestrial habitats\n150: Common limit for spray drift exposure concerns related to species population level effects\nFull Extent: Distances included (in meters)\n0: Field or Use Site\n30: Directly adjacent / runoff to terrestrial habitats\n305: Limits of spray drift model for ground application or airblast\n792: Limits of spray drift model for aerial applications\n1600: Runoff model limit to wetland habitat\nAdditional methods used in the development of specific UDLs and the associated data source(s) included below.\n\nAll UDLs generated from the USDA's Cropland Data layer represents agricultural pesticide uses. Each UDL is generated from a group of individual crops classes from USDA's Cropland Data Layer. The over 200 cultivated classes are grouped into 15 general classes to reduces the likelihood of errors of omission and commission between similar crop categories to support decision making. In selecting how to group crops from the CDL, EPA referred to the grouping used by the U.S. Geological Survey (Baker and Capel, 2011) and the Generic Endangered Species Task Force (Amos et al., 2010). This information considers environmental factors that influence the location of crops and the error matrices provided by USDA with the original CDL data. By considering these agronomic factors in addition to the error matrices it is possible to improve the accuracy and year-to-year matches for the UDLs while retaining the agronomic similarities important in decision making. In addition to this categorical aggregation the UDLs are temporally aggregated to include 5 years of data from the CDL to account for changes year to year, such as crop rotations. Currently, these UDLs represent data from the 2018-2022 CDL. The agricultural classes were further refined by comparing county level National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) 2017 Census of Agriculture (CoA) acreage reports to county level UDL acreages. If a county's UDL acreage for a given class was lower than the NASS acreage, the UDL extent was expanded within Cultivated Layer from the CDL until the UDL's acreage matched or exceeded the NASS CoA. Data not available outside of CONUS. Land cover classes representing each UDL Combined into a single layer.\n\nThe source GeoTiff may be downloaded here: https://geopub.epa.gov/OCSPP_Downloads/Citrus.zip\n\nData Sources:\n\nCDL Class Names: Citrus, Oranges\nCDL Class Values: 72, 212", "summary": "This image service depicts a Use Data Layer (UDL) that represents agricultural pesticide uses on Citrus crops as used by US EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP) in endangered species risk assessments.", "title": "Citrus", "tags": [ "Biota", "Environment", "United States", "Agriculture", "Biology", "Compliance", "Ecosystem", "Ground Water", "Impact", "Land", "Management", "Monitoring", "Natural Resources", "Pesticides", "Regulatory", "Risk", "Sites", "Surface Water", "Toxics", "Waste", "Water", "biology", "critical habitat", "ECO", "Ecosystems", "endangered", "endangered species", "fish", "habitat", "National Oceanic and Atmospheric Organization", "NOAA", "range", "SEGS", "species", "threatened", "threatened species", "United States Environmental Protection Agency", "United States Fish and Wildlife Service", "US Fish and Wildlife Service", "USFWS", "wildlife", "Pesticides: Protect the Environment from Pesticide Risk (Science and Technology", "Environmental Programs and Management)" ], "type": "Image Service", "typeKeywords": [ "ArcGIS Server", "Data", "Image Service", "Service" ], "thumbnail": "", "url": "https://awsbaboon.epa.gov:6443/arcgis", "minScale": 5.91657527591555E8, "maxScale": 1155581.108577, "spatialReference": "WGS_1984_Web_Mercator_Auxiliary_Sphere", "accessInformation": "Feature Service: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Chemical Safety & Pollution Prevention, Office of Pesticide Programs \n\nData Steward: United States Department of Agriculture National Agricultural Statistics Service, Cropland Data Layer, Census of Agriculture; Bureau of Land Management, Grazing Allotments; United States Geological Survey, National Land Cover Database, GAP Land Cover Data, GAP Protected Areas Database, LandFire Existing Vegetation Type LandFire Public Events GeoDatabase ; National Oceanic & Atmospheric Organization, Coastal Change Analysis Program; United States Census Bureau, Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing database; United States Forest Service, Grazing Allotments; Bonneville Power Administration; Dun & Bradstreet; ESRI StreetMap; NAVTEQ Street Data", "licenseInfo": "Terms of Use for Geospatial Data (https://www.epa.gov/web-policies-and-procedures/epa-disclaimers#geospatial)\nThese geospatial data and corresponding cartographic materials have been approved for use by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as advised by the EPA Geospatial Advisory Committee (EGAC). This approved release is on the condition that neither the EPA nor the U.S. Government may be held liable for any damages resulting from its authorized or unauthorized use. These data and any corresponding products, services, or materials do not necessarily represent the EPA's official position or viewpoint, expressed or implied. These content items are not intended for use in establishing liability or calculating cost recovery statutes of limitations. They cannot be relied upon to create any rights, substantive or procedural, enforceable by any party in litigation with the United States or third parties. Additionally, although these data have been processed successfully on EPA computer systems, no warranty expressed or implied can be made regarding the accuracy or utility of the data on any other system or for general or scientific purposes, nor shall the act of distribution constitute any such warranty. The Agency reserves the right to revise EPA-stewarded datasets pursuant to further analysis and review without public notice. Unless otherwise specified, geospatial data produced by the EPA is by default in the public domain and is not subject to domestic copyright protection under 17 U.S.C. Section 105. Referenced data from non-EPA sources are neither inherently verified nor independently tested by the Agency in all circumstances. Permission to reproduce copyrighted items not produced by the EPA must be secured from the copyright owner. EPA strongly recommends careful attention be paid to metadata files associated with these data to better understand limitations, restrictions or intended use. The U.S. EPA shall not be held liable for improper or incorrect use of the data.", "portalUrl": "" }