Forest Ecosystem Monitoring Cooperative(802) 656-0683femc@uvm.eduwww.uvm.edu/femc705 Spear StreetSouth BurlingtonVermont05403United States of AmericaNortheastern States Research Cooperative United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and AgriculturefunderUniversity of Vermont Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural ResourcesleadVermont Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department partnerEstimating distribution and connectivity of recolonizing American marten in the northeastern United States using expert elicitation techniquesThe American marten Martes americana is a species of conservation concern in the northeastern United States due to widespread declines from over-harvesting and habitat loss. Little information exists on current marten distribution and how landscape characteristics shape patterns of occupancy across the region, which could help develop effective recovery strategies. The rarity of marten and lack of historical distribution records are also problematic for region-wide conservation planning. Expert opinion can provide a source of information for estimating species–landscape relationships and is especially useful when empirical data are sparse. We created a survey to elicit expert opinion and build a model that describes marten occupancy in the northeastern United States as a function of landscape conditions.Estimating distribution and connectivity of recolonizing American marten in the northeastern United States using expert elicitation techniquesDonovanTerriKilpatrickWilliamMurdochJamesAylwardCodyBernierChrisKatzJonwildlifedistributionoccupancy modelingexpert opinionconnectivityamerican martenKnown presence2015-01-012018-01-01This is a shapefile of areas of known marten presence in the study area, which includes Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, and upstate New York. For details this map, please see: Aylward, C. M., J. D. Murdoch, T. M. Donovan, C. W. Kilpatrick, C. Bernier, and J. Katz. 2018. Estimating distribution and connectivity of recolonizing American marten in the northeastern United States using expert elicitation techniques. Animal Conservation (doi:10.1111/acv.12417). The shapefile may be useful for providing geographic context to the marten corridor map (also included as a dataset in this project; see figure 5 in the paper).20180531221857_marten_presence.zipVMC.1266.2518mySQLJames Murdoch (2018) Marten known presence map. FEMC. Available online at: /femc/data/archive/project/marten/dataset/marten_presence/femc/data/archive/project/marten/dataset/marten_presence