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Hi @NickDanty did you ever get in touch with your Esri support team on this? If not, I can reach out and get you connected. However I also wanted to make sure you had seen this video on how to use the Solution. An asset in this setting is the location of something to which we want to assess equitability against. So for a park system, it would be the parks of San Francisco. I know you posted this a while ago, so I'm curious to follow up with you and learn more! You can reach me at sfleming@esri.com cc. @ChrisBuscaglia @MichaelBrown12
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05-11-2023
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Way back in the day when I was studying ecology, the class that I loved the most was biogeography. My professor had designed the syllabus around David Quammen’s “Song of the Dodo.” In that book, and representing the foundation for our modern understanding about ecology is the role of adaptation. Adaptation is a fickle beast, and never in my life did I imagine I would live to witness a global pandemic that has applied adaptive pressure to so many aspects of our lives. The Esri User Conference is no exception! For two years, we’ve run it virtually and this year we have a hybrid event with plenty of virtual opportunities. That said – I am SO EXCITED to be back in person. We have a lot of first-time attendees and in a weird way this will also be my “first” UC… first in-person as an employee, that is! So, I thought about what our community might need; whether you’re a first-time attendee or a seasoned Pro, with slight adaptations this year, everyone could probably benefit from some tips and tricks to help keep us focused, networking with our industry, and having a fun and fully productive time. First up! Find Us on the Showcase Floor We have a lot of opportunities for our environmental community to engage at the Esri UC. Whether it’s on the showcase floor, at paper presentations, the VERY popular Environment and Natural Resources Special Interest Group (SIG) meeting, or a demo theatre - you can find myself and my colleagues making sure folks are having a great time, finding what they need and getting INSPIRED! To begin, here’s the layout of the showcase floor with the Environmental area called out. Sooo basically we’ve got FRONT ‘N CENTER! Hopefully you can’t miss us. You can expect to find myself and other colleagues probably lurking in that area and we’ll have 3 kiosks set up where we can chat all things environment: whether you’re in to that regulatory stuff, that land and wildlife management stuff or that outdoor recreation stuff – we’ll be sure to have something for you! Find Us in the Demo Theatre Demo Theatres are where I spent a lot of my time when I was a user. I think of them as the American Gladiator stage for GIS nerds – we’d all race from one theatre to the next fighting for a seat, madly taking notes, and if you weren’t there in time you’d have to try and watch from behind the glass or awkwardly standing near the back. I LOVED IT! So I’m very excited this year to have a Demo Theatre session. This session will cover, at a high level, the landscape of things happening in the environmental industry and how our community are embracing the tools. Its intent is to get folks thinking, excited and started down a path to revolutionize their own workflows. I’ll pull examples from public, private and non-profit organizations that span across an array of tasks that environmental professionals conduct. The Demo Theatres are also located in the showcase and you can find us here: Find Your Community at the SIG! Just like the Grateful Dead, every year @MikeBialousz and I go on our final tour as a band. Even though he’s defected for another area of Esri, he can’t get rid of me that easily. I’ve roped him in to once again co-host with me at the Environment and Natural Resources Special Interest Group (SIG) meeting. Thanks to our user community, this has quickly risen to be one of the most popular SIGs and we’re so honored that the community shows up the way you all do! Now in its fourth year, we gathered over 350 responses from YOU ALL that helped shape the session. We’ll be giving a shoutout to some of the amazing work you all have sent to us, hear from three presenters, have a Q&A, and end the session by responding to some of the “wish list” items you sent in. Along the way, Mike and I will compete for who can get in the most killer burn on the other – joined this year by our referee, Jennifer Vaughan-Gibson. Hear from Nevada Department of Wildlife on how they transformed their aerial survey workflows, Montana Department of Environmental Quality on how they are collaborating with landowners to address abandoned mine lands, and the US EPA (!!!) around tools they’re building to address environmental justice. That’s a Coachella-worthy lineup, in my opinion! But most importantly… this is a great chance to network with the rest of our environmental community – we’re just here to facilitate it! Find Us Chillin’ at Esri Basecamp Ok, let’s be real… the Esri UC is already an overwhelming experience. By Thursday we all look like tattered dolls running on fumes, ready to decompress a little, recharge our batteries and save the world with GIS! This year, we know socializing can be a little extra exhausting. That's why several teams across Esri—including Influence Marketing, Story Maps, and our Digital Experience team—are creating a new way to decompress, outside. Without leaving the convention center ground, UC attendees can head just outside Hall H, near the fins, to Esri Basecamp. The Esri Basecamp experience will include an exhibit of popular California spots managed by the National Park Service and the Bureau of Land Management, complete with an AR experience and a comfy campsite for hanging out. As a bonus, there's a complimentary online experience to access fun nature-related media and dive deeper into a geospatial approach to conservation. So in between sessions, head outside to decompress, soak up some sun and tour California landscapes at the Esri Basecamp. But wait, there’s more! Paper Sessions, SIGs, Demo Theatres, Technical Workshops… there is so much going on that it can be hard to whittle down the full detailed agenda. This is why, every year, we help you out and publish industry-specific fliers that can help you navigate through all the sessions and help plan your week. Find it here. In addition to the detailed agenda, make sure you check out the business partners and other vendors on the showcase floor. When I was a user, I thought I had to implement all of the solutions for my department BY MYSELF (GIS Analyst, party of one… sound familiar?) I felt overwhelmed by where to start and what we needed, but these business partners can really help you out so TALK TO THEM! Treat them like therapists and tell them all your woes! From helping you build a geospatial strategy, building buy-in and capacity, implementing governance and helping build solutions and innovate… you’ll find a wide range of services offered across the showcase floor. Take advantage of it! Some Final Tips Wear Comfortable Shoes: the amount of sheer space at the convention center is crazy and as you can see from the layout above – it’s stretched out in a linear fashion. You WILL walk a lot and at lunch you WILL walk into the Gas Lamp District and you WILL walk to and from your hotel and you WILL walk across the showcase floor a zillion times and you WILL walk from session to session and you WILL likely run to the plenary to get the best seat in the house. Sound exhausting? It is – in the best way possible. I would characterize the overall dress code as on the casual side (although this varies from industry to industry, so don’t take my word for it.) Therefore, you have an opportunity to not look out of place wearing a pair of comfortable shoes that won’t be making it into Vogue any time soon. Bring a Backpack (not a tote!): My first year, I made the mistake of not bringing a backpack, and the swag bag came with a tote. Great! I thought… except then I kept receiving all sorts of swag from vendors and became overburdened with said tote digging into my shoulder for the rest of the week. LESSON LEARNED. Bring a backpack or something you could comfortably wear/carry for a few days. Make Friends: The first couple of years, I attended the UC solo. No problem! I felt like the entire city of San Diego was there for the User Conference. When we all swarmed into the Gas Lamp District for lunch, you could be assured that everyone around you was also there for the UC. Strike up a conversation, meet some people, make some friends. I’ve met some incredible people in fascinating roles throughout the industry this way. Some years, we formed an impromptu crew and would stick together for dinners and the Balboa Park party. Safety in numbers! Plenary Strategy: Last, but not least – have a plenary strategy. Again, my first year I was clueless. I didn’t know what a big deal it was or how amazing it was and I was late getting there after an Esri employee asked me, concerned, “Aren’t you going to the plenary?” Oh… ok, sure! DO NOT MISS THE PLENARY. Walking in late I was shocked at how huge it was and the whole setting made me emotional in a good way! It felt like a revolution was happening and our community was there en masse to see it through. That plenary session literally changed the course of my own career and shaped how I think and communicate about our industry and GIS. Next year, I got there early and got a seat NEAR the front. NEAR… don’t go all the way to the front because those seats are reserved. When you turn around to find the next nearest open seat, they will ALL BE GONE. So that’s it! Before this turns in to a thesis, I’ll stop there. Bottom line: Have a strategy, find your people, be inspired, ask questions, ask for help and HAVE FUN. I can’t wait to see you all and hear about the incredible work you’re conducting!
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06-10-2022
01:22 PM
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Extra! Extra! Read all about it! Presence-Only Predictive Modeling (aka MaxEnt) is now available in ArcGIS 2.9 and I am SO EXCITED. Why is this a big deal? Well, for one, it's just super fun... Ok but really - it's exciting because there are many phenomenon that occur and we know where they've occurred but not necessarily where they HAVEN'T occurred. Like Bigfoot, for example. (Just kidding... or am I?) For wildlife biologists (including those that study cryptozoology), botanists or other -ologists looking to understanding where something COULD be... or more specifically, where the conditions might occur to support the presence of said phenomenon... but they only know where it already exists, MaxEnt modeling is extremely helpful. How does it work? I am no mathematician, but if you want to know the nitty gritty details you can read the documentation. Or you can CC the @GeoSpatialAnalysis team in your response. Ha! But here's my version of how it works: Let's say I have a rare plant species and I have just a handful of known populations. I've been tasked with strategizing my field work during its flowering season and I want to maximize my time by targeting searches in locations where the species COULD occur. Maybe I know a few things about what it seems to prefer - a specific geology, proximity to a stream, not-too-steep of a slope, and OH! perhaps some habitat characteristics. Great! You can pull all those underlying datasets in to ArcGIS Pro: A geology layer, run some Distance Accumulation on a stream layer, derive some slope and pull in some land cover data. On top of that, let's pull in our presence data for our species of interest. Now- we're going to run the MaxEnt tool, which is basically us asking the machine to look at where presence occurs, consider the underlying datasets that might EXPLAIN why this species is here and not there, and then score the rest of our study area based on how close we find similar criteria that match. A better score, means the higher the probability is that the right conditions might occur for this species to also be found there. What are some considerations? Again, I totally recommend reading the documentation for the details, but in short, I always tell folks that running this tool does actually require one to know something about the phenomenon you're trying to run it against. Why? Because modeling anything - using MaxEnt or otherwise - requires iteration. You must do this a few times. Here's a good example: I once ran MaxEnt on a salamander species and I got a REALLY GREAT result the first time I ran the model. BUT.. when I actually looked at the output and not just the score, I realized that the model had picked up on what's called "sample bias"... I happened to have a lot of records near ROADS, because I would stop the truck, get out and sample, and find a record. So my first run told me ROADS ARE AWESOME FOR SALAMANDERS! Oops. I had to remove my sample bias through thinning (a tool available in the Presence-only Prediction Tool in ArcGIS Pro) and run it again, then start to look at my explanatory variables (geology, slope, etc) and ask myself "Is this layer helping my model at all?" and decided whether or not I wanted to keep it. It's pretty easy to do this, because as part of your output, you get little graphs of each of your explanatory variables that tell you which attribute of that variable matters most and how much for influencing the model. Pretty awesome, right? And you can do this for plants, animals, or other kinds of phenomena! It's SO EASY and super powerful and has tons of potential use cases (wildlife corridors, I'm looking at YOU!) For more info check out this blog post.
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03-27-2022
01:41 PM
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Hey Kasey, it's possible you need to adjust some of the settings for rending rasters in Pro. See documentation here.
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06-24-2021
06:55 AM
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Check out this recent case study examining the use of field mobility tools to monitor and respond to wildland fire in Pennsylvania! https://www.esri.com/about/newsroom/blog/pennsylvania-live-map-wildfire-response/
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01-12-2021
12:45 PM
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Have you come across this tool on Creating Random Points? This tool has inputs where you can set the total number of points you want (280) and let it do its thing. If you want to restrict it to putting points down in some general area, then you can create a polygon from that area of interest and input it as the constraining extent. You could also pull this tool in to Model Builder and add some additional tools to achieve the workflow you're looking for. For example, here are some observations (or "nests") as black hexagons: I take these and use them as an input for a buffer (set to output a single polygon) and then run random points using that buffer as my extent constraint. Here is a picture of what the model might look like: When this model is run, you would get an output of random points, shown here in green against my original "nests" layer in black hexagons: Can you elaborate on what you mean by "a specific range of conditions"? Hope this helps!
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01-12-2021
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Fresh off last week’s R3 Forum, fall is just around the corner, and more folks than ever are exploring their public lands… We're feeling energized about what this means for the broader conservation community and how we can begin asking questions about who is heading outdoors and how can we fully maximize this opportunity that’s in front of us? One of the major themes around this year’s virtual R3 symposium was around marketing, and UNDERSTANDING your audience: who, what, why and WHERE. Esri worked with a handful of states to develop solutions for R3 – the first step being this baseline understanding that was a prominent focus of the R3 Symposium. We want to provide agencies with the “Easy Button” to be able to deploy a solution out of the box, with all the technical components wired up and ready to go. South Dakota has already taken advantage of them with subtle configurations to meet their needs. Initially these were deployed via the Solutions Deployment Tool in ArcGIS Pro, but we wanted a way to make it even EASIER. Enter: The Solutions App in ArcGIS Online. Through the Solutions App, you can browse many of Esri’s Solutions and deploy them directly from your organization, to your organization, bypassing the initial deployment through ArcGIS Pro. With the Outdoor Recreation Solution, you get not only the R3 license dashboard, but also a new Hub Template to conduct outreach! This includes our locators for parks, license retailers, boating/fishing/hunting and can be configured to meet your unique needs. The better we understand our audiences and provide them with an intuitive place for all their outdoor information, the better we position conservation for a sustainable future. We look forward to seeing how you all deploy and configure these solutions! ArcGIS Solutions State Natural Resources
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09-02-2020
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I am sure you have all seen the news of unsolicited seeds turning up in many states across the US which is creating obvious concern. State Agriculture Departments are responding in various ways, including soliciting for emails or phone calls. Others have leveraged the Esri platform, realizing this as a perfect use case for Survey123. States such as Ohio and Alabama have stood up their own Survey123 forms. In Ohio, they let us know that as of noon today, they received 300 reports since standing up the survey Monday afternoon! They are able to easily report this directly to USDA on a daily basis. To this end, we've made a little generic form as food-for-thought. If you have any questions or need any support, feel free to reach out to Sunny Fleming or Mike Bialousz. Natural Resources ArcGIS Survey123 State and Local - Environment and Natural Resources
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07-29-2020
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Dear State and Local Government Environment and Natural Resources Professionals, We're seeking feedback on how to grow and strengthen our virtual community! We would appreciate you taking a moment to fill out the below surveys: ENR Community Survey ENR "Marketing" Survey Thank you so much!
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07-27-2020
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If you missed it, Esri recently published this case study highlighting how Tennessee State Parks and Massachusetts Dept. of Conservation and Recreation used the Esri platform in unprecedented circumstances. How has Covid affected your Environmental agency? covid19 response #stateparks #conservation environment
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07-22-2020
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