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- California Natural Diversity Database
The California Natural Diversity Database (CNDDB) is an inventory of the status and locations of rare plants and animals in California CNDDB staff work with partners to maintain current lists of rare species, as well as to maintain an ever-growing database of GIS-mapped locations for these species
- California Natural Diversity Database (CNDDB) | California Climate Commons
The CNDDB is a "natural heritage program" and is part of a nationwide network of similar programs overseen by NatureServe (formerly part of The Nature Conservancy)
- CNDDB - Plants and Animals
If you have data in decimal degrees, deg min sec, or UTM, you can use BIOS to map your location using NAD83, the datum used by the CNDDB Print out the map and mail with your field survey form to the CNDDB
- CNDDB Maps and Data - California Department of Fish and Wildlife
The CNDDB is comprised of two data components: Text information and spatial information Text information is available through RareFind 5 and provides essential information about special status species and occurrences
- Monthly CNDDB Data Download
CNDDB, Spotted Owl, and Barred Owl dataset components have been compressed into separate, self-executing files Subscribers with computers running Windows® may use these files to update their CNDDB and owl data
- Frequently Asked Questions about CNDDB
The legislation which founded the CNDDB program requires that users share a portion of the costs of maintaining the CNDDB The money gathered by CNDDB subscriptions helps us fund the most comprehensive database of California's imperiled species
- CNDDB Subscriptions - California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Attention CNDDB subscribers: starting February 4, 2020, any subscription user wishing to access CNDDB-related data will be required to register for an individual CDFW account and be listed as an authorized user under a current CNDDB subscription
- Submitting Data to the CNDDB
The CNDDB accepts digital data in a number of formats including GIS shapefiles, DBF files, Microsoft Access databases, or tabular formats (such as Excel tables)
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