Table 10. Native species at risk of losing ≥ 50% of their habitat in at least one of the possible future scenarios

(18%, or 41 out of 222 native species). * indicates species at risk of losing 50 - 75% of habitat in the specified landscape; ** indicates 75 - 90% habitat loss; and *** indicates > 90% habitat loss. See Table 2 for scientific names and risk values. See Tables 1 and 2 for definitions of V (vulnerable; O = Oregon status, F = Federal status), R (rare), and E (extirpated).
Species V R E Hi-D Mod-D Trend Mod-C Hi-C
northwestern salamander *
clouded salamander O **
American Bittern *
California Condor F E *** *
Northern Goshawk O, F R **
Ruffed Grouse *
Mountain Quail *
Virginia Rail *
Sora *
Common Snipe *
Marbled Murrelet O, F **
Northern Pygmy Owl O *
Burrowing Owl O, F R *
Spotted Owl O, F **
Red-breasted Sapsucker *
Pileated Woodpecker O *
Pacific-slope Flycatcher *
Chestnut-backed Chickadee *
Red-breasted Nuthatch *
Brown Creeper *
Marsh Wren *
Golden-crowned Kinglet *
Western Bluebird O *
Varied Thrush *
Wrentit *
Solitary Vireo *
Hutton's Vireo *
Yellow-rumped Warbler *
Hermit Warbler *
Macgillivray's Warbler *
Western Tanager *
Black-headed Grosbeak *
Red Crossbill *
Evening Grosbeak *
long-legged myotis O, F *
hoary bat *
Tonwsend's big-eared bat O, F R *
western gray squirrel O *
Douglas' squirrel *
red tree vole **
long-tailed vole *
ed landscape;