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ODOT Wildlife Hotspots Study

ODOT Wildlife Hotspots Study. RESULTS OF STATEWIDE ANALYSIS July 21, 2008. Melinda Trask Oregon Department of Transportation, Geo-Environmental Section, Salem OR Francesca Cafferata-Coe, Jessica Burton, Ellen Voth, and John Lloyd, Mason, Bruce & Girard, Inc., Portland OR.

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ODOT Wildlife Hotspots Study

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  1. ODOT Wildlife Hotspots Study RESULTS OF STATEWIDE ANALYSIS July 21, 2008 Melinda Trask Oregon Department of Transportation, Geo-Environmental Section, Salem OR Francesca Cafferata-Coe, Jessica Burton, Ellen Voth, and John Lloyd, Mason, Bruce & Girard, Inc., Portland OR

  2. Types of Wildlife Collision Data • Focused Road Kill Observations • Possible to get accurate location and species info. • Most expensive • Expert Opinion • Good for first cut; precursor to focused studies • Subjective; not empirical • Crash Records • Used for national statistics • Limited subjective reporting • Data quality cannot be verified • Dispatch Carcass Reports • Most comprehensive option • Data quality cannot be verified

  3. Oregon's Highway Animal-Vehicle Collisions • CRASH RECORDS: • Avg. 400 wildlife collisions per year, past 14 years • About 5,500 records statewide • Less than 3% of all crash reports in Oregon • 15 fatalities & 117 serious injuries in 14 years • Crash records represent only a small portion of actual animal-vehicle collisions nationally (less than 10% of actual; literature) • Dispatch Carcass Records • 6 times more data in similar period • Represents avg. 2,600 wildlife collisions per year, past 12 years • About 32,000 records statewide in OR (12 years)

  4. ODOT Wildlife Collision Prevention Plan • Addressing wildlife passage is supported by the Governor and ODOT’s current mission and goals, and particularly within the values of safety, accountability, and environmental stewardship. • Current lack of information - we cannot adequately address the problem. • Do we have a significant statewide road kill problem or just some areas? • Need to prioritize wildlife movement corridors and highway barrier problem areas to make science-based decisions and cost-effective, versus ad-hoc. • Need better tools to adequately address wildlife passage. • Non-regulated but supported by FHWA, ODFW, USFWS, CETAS, nationwide attention.

  5. US Hwy ODOT Wildlife Collision Hot Spot Analysis • Uses existing carcass pick-up records • Statewide, analytical approach • Identify high frequency wildlife-vehicle collision zones • Conducted pilot study in D10 to fine tune methods and determine the feasibility of statewide analysis Density: low medium high

  6. Data Preparation - Methods • 3 different types of record keeping • Wildlife Incident Reports, call = RDKILL • Animal Type, Deer & Elk • Consistent Dates, 12 yeas of data (1995-2006) • Location, +/- 0.5 mile • Link Location to GIS Coordinates

  7. Original # Records 31,595 (100%) Step 1 - Data Processing Narrowing Acceptable Parameters 25,216 (80%) (20% reduction) Cut out records older than 1995, duplicate records, non deer/elk, low precision (> 0.5 mi) Tabular Information Problems 21,335 (68%)(12% reduction) Poor location, highway nomenclature, or MP Not enough information in recorded data MP not referenced Step 2 - Linkage to GIS GIS Mapping Problems 17,824 (56%)* (11% reduction) Route ≠ ODOT Highway number * Final number of "good" records used in data analysis. Data Preparation - Results

  8. GIS Challenges • 2 highway numbering systems in use • Signed Highways • State Highway Routes (ODOT internal system) • Mileposts based on Routes not signed hwys • Mileposts not unique on signed hwys • Dispatch data generally refer to Routes • Final dataset reduced to only records with equal hwys:route relationship

  9. Final Data Set

  10. Analytical Methods • Nearest Neighbor Analysis • 1st cut to see if clustering is non-random • Ripley’s K Distribution • Gives indication of scale of clusters • Kernel Density Evaluation • Shows location of clusters by density

  11. Results: Nearest Neighbor Analysis • Carcass reports occur significantly closer together than would be expected by chance • Does not identify where the clusters occur

  12. Results: Ripley’s K Distribution • Looks at a range of scale distances • Shows significant clustering of WVCs at all distances • Does not identify cluster locations Region 3 shown (other Regions essentially the same)

  13. Results: Kernal Density Evaluation • Analogous to a histogram of reports per unit area with infinitely small bins • Produces an estimate of risk for each point. • Highlights highway segments with higher density probabilities than others • Results Depend on: • Density of points • Relative proximity of points • Study area • Method of categorizing • Ranking or # “bins”

  14. Discussion • This study did not address why hotspots are found in these areas. • vehicle speed, traffic volume, movement barriers, adjacent habitat structure, animal distribution, travel corridors, etc. • Necessary to make sound management decisions • ODOT can pay for wildlife crossing improvements • Justified under PD-04 • FHWA Enhancement program (Category 11) • Oregon Transportation Plan (Goal 4.1.1) • SAFETEA-LU Section 148 (approved uses of safety funds) • Hazard Elimination Program (HEP) • Highway Safety Improvement Program (HSIP)

  15. Next Steps ?? • Convert data to vector and link to Hwy/MP • Clean-up data for Regions – spreadsheet • Uses in Planning • Uses in Project Development • Uses in Safety Projects?? • RESEARCH NEEDS • Detailed case-studies • Design Options • Characterize existing highway crossings and barriers • Wildlife Connections Conference

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