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Definition: Species in Greatest Conservation Need |
- Species whose populations are identified as being rare, declining, or vulnerable in Minnesota
- Species at risk because they depend upon rare, declining, or vulnerable habitats (such as native prairies and grasslands; lakeshores and riparian corridors; wetlands; brushlands; unimpounded river and stream channels; unfragmented interior forest).
- Species subject to other specific threats that make them vulnerable, such as:
- Over-exploitation
- Invasive species
- Disease
- Contaminants
- Lack of citizen understanding and stewardship (such as killing large snakes thought to be venomous.
- Species with certain characteristics that make them vulnerable, such as species that:
- Require large home ranges/use multiple habitats
- Depend upon large habitat patch sizes
- Need special resources
- Depend upon an ecological process (e.g. fire) that no longer operates within the natural range of variation
- Are limited in their ability to recover on their own due to low dispersal ability or low reproductive rate
- Have a highly localized or restricted distribution (Endemics)
- Concentrate their populations during some time of the year (such as bats clustering in hibernacula and migratory stop-overs).
- Species whose Minnesota populations are stable, but are declining in a substantial part of their range outside of Minnesota (such as common loon or black tern).
Full Definition 31kb
Minnesota vertebrate and bird biodiversity statistics 
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