Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>The file indicates the results of a Maximum Likelihood classification applied to the Green and Red bands of aerial imagery supplied by DFO (source: Province of PEI, dated 2010). Field points used for training sites were also provided by DFO. Note that photosynthetic spectral responses were all assumed to be eelgrass and not other species (e.g. Ulva), so results may overestimate eelgrass in areas where other submerged aquatic vegetation is present. Overall accuracy incorporating error of omission and commission was 76.9%. </SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 334a2367ceb546c39f21bb1c5411231b
Copyright Text: Stantec Consulting Ltd., 2014 produced for DFO Gulf Science, Aquaculture and Coastal Ecosystems section
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>This layer represents the eelgrass distribution in the Pugwash Estuary as of August, 2014. The methods and analysis leading to the creation of this layer is as follows:</SPAN></P><P><SPAN STYLE="font-weight:bold;">Methods:</SPAN></P><P><SPAN>Aerial imagery was taken August 20, 2014, between the hours of 12:50pm-2pm where low tide was 0.6m at 12:44pm, by a Cessna high winged aircraft equipped with a vertical photo hole in the belly. A Canon 1DX - 18MP camera with a 35mm lens was used for the true colour photos and a specially modified IR version of the Canon 5DMarkI 13MP camera with a 35mm lens was used for the infrared photos. The area was flown in parallel lines, at 2000ft for the color imagery and at 4000ft for the IR imagery.</SPAN></P><P><SPAN>Roughly 1500 JPEG images were taken for the color map, of which roughly 1000 were used to assemble the final large map. The IR images map was made from about 700 images. Agisoft's Photoscan and Photoshop CS5 softwares were used to assemble the map, using both TIFFs and JPEG file formats depending on the size of the map. The map was assembled into strips, which joined one at a time to form a larger piece. Some manual editing was needed to join some of the images. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>To compile individual images into one large image of the estuary, the resolution was reduced slightly (~10-15%) due to the limitations in file formatting (JPEGS can't be any more then 1.0GB and TIFFS can't be any more then 4.0GB in size). That means individual files and smaller compiled images have slightly more detail then the image of the entire estuary.</SPAN></P><P><SPAN STYLE="font-weight:bold;">Analysis: </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The analysis was completed by NCC staff using ArcGIS 10.1. First, the image was georeferenced to ESRI basemap imagery using a third-order polynomial and the cubic convolution resampling technique was employed in the georeferencing process. </SPAN></P><P><SPAN>Due to initial issues converting rasters to vector formats, the initial imagery was resampled using cubic convolution into a 5m pixel size. Then, using the Image Classification Tool, a maximum likelihood classification was run to classify the imagery based on the pixel value. The dense and sparse classes were extracted from the raster and converted to a vector format (shapefile). Polygons less than 25m² were deleted, and polygons within 15m were aggregated (clumped together. Finally, manual editing was required to edit the classified areas since the pixel classification had issues differentiating between water and eelgrass, qualifying sparse beds as they were a combination of multiple bare sediment and eelgrass pixels. Fifty-one ground control points were taken August 21, 2014 (the day after aerial imagery was flown) and compared to the final eelgrass delineations for an accuracy assessment.</SPAN></P><P><SPAN STYLE="font-weight:bold;">Results:</SPAN></P><P><SPAN>The eelgrass meadows in the Pugwash estuary comprise ~54% of the estuary with an area of 282ha. The eelgrass is primarily distributed within the basin of the Pugwash estuary, though there are beds extending up into the Pugwash River (south of the main basin). When compared to the ground reference points, there was an 82% accuracy in eelgrass classifications.</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN><SPAN>The layer presents the information on the distribution of eelgrass (Zostera marina) beds in James Bay, Chaleur Bay, Estuary and Gulf of St. Lawrence according to a literature review of documents produced between 1987 and 2009. </SPAN></SPAN></P><P><SPAN /></P><P><SPAN>#Fra </SPAN><SPAN><SPAN>La couche présente la distribution spatiale de la zostère marine (Zostera marina) dans la Baie James, la Baie des Chaleurs, l'estuaire et le golfe du Saint-Laurent selon une revue de littérature de documents réalisés entre 1987 et 2009.</SPAN></SPAN></P><P><SPAN /></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 334a2367ceb546c39f21bb1c5411231b
Copyright Text: DFO, 2009. Marie-Claude Martel, Lizon Provencher, Cindy Grant, Hans-Frédéric Ellefsen et Selma Pereira, 2009. Distribution et description des herbiers de zostère du Québec. Pêches et Océans Canada, Secrétariat canadien de consultation scientifique, document de recherche 2009/050. 45p. Sources associated to the differents polygons are included in the attribute table. Consult lineage section for complete references.
#Fra MPO, 2009. Marie-Claude Martel, Lizon Provencher, Cindy Grant, Hans-Frédéric Ellefsen et Selma Pereira, 2009. Distribution et description des herbiers de zostère du Québec. Pêches et Océans Canada, Secrétariat canadien de consultation scientifique, document de recherche 2009/050. 45p. Les sources associées aux différents polygones sont inclus dans la table d'attribut. Voir section Lineage pour les références complètes.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>This data set is a polyline file of mapped ShoreZone units which correspond with data records found in the Unit, Xshr, BioUnit, and BioBand tables of this Geodatabase. Linkage between spatial and attribute data table is through a unique physical identifier in the PHY_IDENT field. Basic definitions of table fields are provided in this metadata, but the user is referred to the "lookup" and "definition" tables in the ShoreZone Coastal Imaging & Habitat Mapping Protocol (2017)</SPAN><SPAN /><SPAN>available online at ShoreZone.org or at CoastalAndOceans.com. ShoreZone is a coastal habitat mapping and classification system in which georeferenced aerial imagery is collected specifically for the interpretation and integration of geomorphic and biological features of the intertidal zone and nearshore environment. Oblique low-altitude aerial video and digital still imagery of the coastal zone is collected during the lowest tides of the year, usually from a helicopter flying at or below 100 m altitude. During image collection, the aircraft's GPS position is continuously recorded so that the video and still imagery have positional information. Video imagery is accompanied by continuous, simultaneous commentary by a geologist and a biologist aboard the aircraft. The imagery and commentary are used in the definition of discrete along-shore coastal habitat units and the mapping of observed physical, geomorphic, sedimentary, and biological across-shore components within those units. Units are digitized as shoreline segments in ArcGIS, then integrated with the along-shore and across-shore geological and biological data attribute tables housed in the geodatabase. Mapped habitat features include degree of wave exposure, substrate type, sediment texture, intertidal biota, and some nearshore subtidal biota.</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 334a2367ceb546c39f21bb1c5411231b
Copyright Text: The ShoreZone Coastal Habitat Mapping Program is supported by a partnership of federal, state, provincial, local, and private agencies. Project management, mapping, and master database maintenance is the responsibility of Coastal and Ocean Resources, Inc. in Victoria, British Columbia. Please see ShoreZone.org or CoastalAndOceans.com for a list of partner agencies and related web sites.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>This data set is a polygon file mapping the location of Sensitive Habitat ShoreZone BioBands. The polygons correspond with data records found in the BioBand table of this Geodatabase. Due to a complex one-to-many relationship, this polygon file links to the "Sensitive_Habitat_ID" table through the "Sen_Hab_ID" field. From there the data can be linked onto the Unit_Lines feature class and the other ShoreZone data tables. Basic definitions of table fields are provided in this metadata, but the user is referred to the "lookup" and "definition" tables in the ShoreZone Coastal Imaging & Habitat Mapping Protocol (2017)</SPAN><SPAN /><SPAN>available online at ShoreZone.org or at CoastalAndOceans.com. ShoreZone is a coastal habitat mapping and classification system in which georeferenced aerial imagery is collected specifically for the interpretation and integration of geomorphic and biological features of the intertidal zone and nearshore environment. Oblique low-altitude aerial video and digital still imagery of the coastal zone is collected during the lowest tides of the year, usually from a helicopter flying at or below 100 m altitude. During image collection, the aircraft's GPS position is continuously recorded so that the video and still imagery have positional information. Video imagery is accompanied by continuous, simultaneous commentary by a geologist and a biologist aboard the aircraft. The imagery and commentary are used in the definition of discrete along-shore coastal habitat units and the mapping of observed physical, geomorphic, sedimentary, and biological across-shore components within those units. Units are digitized as shoreline segments in ArcGIS, then integrated with the along-shore and across-shore geological and biological data attribute tables housed in the geodatabase. Mapped habitat features include degree of wave exposure, substrate type, sediment texture, intertidal biota, and some nearshore subtidal biota.</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 334a2367ceb546c39f21bb1c5411231b
Copyright Text: The ShoreZone Coastal Habitat Mapping Program is supported by a partnership of federal, state, provincial, local, and private agencies. Project management, mapping, and master database maintenance is the responsibility of Coastal and Ocean Resources, Inc. in Victoria, British Columbia. Please see ShoreZone.org or CoastalAndOceans.com for a list of partner agencies and related web sites.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>This data set is a polyline file of mapped ShoreZone units which correspond with data records found in the Unit, Xshr, BioUnit, and BioBand tables of this Geodatabase. Linkage between spatial and attribute data table is through a unique physical identifier in the PHY_IDENT field. Basic definitions of table fields are provided in this metadata, but the user is referred to the "lookup" and "definition" tables in the ShoreZone Coastal Imaging & Habitat Mapping Protocol (2017)</SPAN><SPAN /><SPAN>available online at ShoreZone.org or at CoastalAndOceans.com. ShoreZone is a coastal habitat mapping and classification system in which georeferenced aerial imagery is collected specifically for the interpretation and integration of geomorphic and biological features of the intertidal zone and nearshore environment. Oblique low-altitude aerial video and digital still imagery of the coastal zone is collected during the lowest tides of the year, usually from a helicopter flying at or below 100 m altitude. During image collection, the aircraft's GPS position is continuously recorded so that the video and still imagery have positional information. Video imagery is accompanied by continuous, simultaneous commentary by a geologist and a biologist aboard the aircraft. The imagery and commentary are used in the definition of discrete along-shore coastal habitat units and the mapping of observed physical, geomorphic, sedimentary, and biological across-shore components within those units. Units are digitized as shoreline segments in ArcGIS, then integrated with the along-shore and across-shore geological and biological data attribute tables housed in the geodatabase. Mapped habitat features include degree of wave exposure, substrate type, sediment texture, intertidal biota, and some nearshore subtidal biota.</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 334a2367ceb546c39f21bb1c5411231b
Copyright Text: The ShoreZone Coastal Habitat Mapping Program is supported by a partnership of federal, state, provincial, local, and private agencies. Project management, mapping, and master database maintenance is the responsibility of Coastal and Ocean Resources, Inc. in Victoria, British Columbia. Please see ShoreZone.org or CoastalAndOceans.com for a list of partner agencies and related web sites.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>This data set is a polygon file mapping the location of Sensitive Habitat ShoreZone BioBands. The polygons correspond with data records found in the BioBand table of this Geodatabase. Due to a complex one-to-many relationship, this polygon file links to the "Sensitive_Habitat_ID" table through the "Sen_Hab_ID" field. From there the data can be linked onto the Unit_Lines feature class and the other ShoreZone data tables. Basic definitions of table fields are provided in this metadata, but the user is referred to the "lookup" and "definition" tables in the ShoreZone Coastal Imaging & Habitat Mapping Protocol (2017)</SPAN><SPAN /><SPAN>available online at ShoreZone.org or at CoastalAndOceans.com. ShoreZone is a coastal habitat mapping and classification system in which georeferenced aerial imagery is collected specifically for the interpretation and integration of geomorphic and biological features of the intertidal zone and nearshore environment. Oblique low-altitude aerial video and digital still imagery of the coastal zone is collected during the lowest tides of the year, usually from a helicopter flying at or below 100 m altitude. During image collection, the aircraft's GPS position is continuously recorded so that the video and still imagery have positional information. Video imagery is accompanied by continuous, simultaneous commentary by a geologist and a biologist aboard the aircraft. The imagery and commentary are used in the definition of discrete along-shore coastal habitat units and the mapping of observed physical, geomorphic, sedimentary, and biological across-shore components within those units. Units are digitized as shoreline segments in ArcGIS, then integrated with the along-shore and across-shore geological and biological data attribute tables housed in the geodatabase. Mapped habitat features include degree of wave exposure, substrate type, sediment texture, intertidal biota, and some nearshore subtidal biota.</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 334a2367ceb546c39f21bb1c5411231b
Copyright Text: The ShoreZone Coastal Habitat Mapping Program is supported by a partnership of federal, state, provincial, local, and private agencies. Project management, mapping, and master database maintenance is the responsibility of Coastal and Ocean Resources, Inc. in Victoria, British Columbia. Please see ShoreZone.org or CoastalAndOceans.com for a list of partner agencies and related web sites.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>All eelgrass beds around Mayne Island that could be detected were mapped. In intertidal zones beds were delineated on foot by staff and volunteers. Beds in subtidal zones were delineated using 2 methods: kayakers assisted by freedivers and boats with underwater cameras.</SPAN><SPAN> </SPAN><SPAN>2009 was the first year that all eelgrass beds around the island were mapped.</SPAN></P><P><SPAN /></P><P><SPAN /></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 334a2367ceb546c39f21bb1c5411231b
Copyright Text: Data was gathered and compiled by the Mayne Island Conservancy Society. Data contact: biologist@conservancyonmayne.com; 250-539-5168
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>This data set is a polygon file mapping the location of Sensitive Habitat ShoreZone BioBands. The polygons correspond with data records found in the BioBand table of this Geodatabase. Due to a complex one-to-many relationship, this polygon file links to the "Sensitive_Habitat_ID" table through the "Sen_Hab_ID" field. From there the data can be linked onto the Unit_Lines feature class and the other ShoreZone data tables. Basic definitions of table fields are provided in this metadata, but the user is referred to the "lookup" and "definition" tables in the ShoreZone Coastal Imaging & Habitat Mapping Protocol (2017)</SPAN><SPAN /><SPAN>available online at ShoreZone.org or at CoastalAndOceans.com. ShoreZone is a coastal habitat mapping and classification system in which georeferenced aerial imagery is collected specifically for the interpretation and integration of geomorphic and biological features of the intertidal zone and nearshore environment. Oblique low-altitude aerial video and digital still imagery of the coastal zone is collected during the lowest tides of the year, usually from a helicopter flying at or below 100 m altitude. During image collection, the aircraft's GPS position is continuously recorded so that the video and still imagery have positional information. Video imagery is accompanied by continuous, simultaneous commentary by a geologist and a biologist aboard the aircraft. The imagery and commentary are used in the definition of discrete along-shore coastal habitat units and the mapping of observed physical, geomorphic, sedimentary, and biological across-shore components within those units. Units are digitized as shoreline segments in ArcGIS, then integrated with the along-shore and across-shore geological and biological data attribute tables housed in the geodatabase. Mapped habitat features include degree of wave exposure, substrate type, sediment texture, intertidal biota, and some nearshore subtidal biota.</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 334a2367ceb546c39f21bb1c5411231b
Copyright Text: The ShoreZone Coastal Habitat Mapping Program is supported by a partnership of federal, state, provincial, local, and private agencies. Project management, mapping, and master database maintenance is the responsibility of Coastal and Ocean Resources, Inc. in Victoria, British Columbia. Please see ShoreZone.org or CoastalAndOceans.com for a list of partner agencies and related web sites.
Description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>This data set is a polyline file of mapped ShoreZone units which correspond with data records found in the Unit, Xshr, BioUnit, and BioBand tables of this Geodatabase. Linkage between spatial and attribute data table is through a unique physical identifier in the PHY_IDENT field. Basic definitions of table fields are provided in this metadata, but the user is referred to the "lookup" and "definition" tables in the ShoreZone Coastal Imaging & Habitat Mapping Protocol (2017)</SPAN><SPAN /><SPAN>available online at ShoreZone.org or at CoastalAndOceans.com. ShoreZone is a coastal habitat mapping and classification system in which georeferenced aerial imagery is collected specifically for the interpretation and integration of geomorphic and biological features of the intertidal zone and nearshore environment. Oblique low-altitude aerial video and digital still imagery of the coastal zone is collected during the lowest tides of the year, usually from a helicopter flying at or below 100 m altitude. During image collection, the aircraft's GPS position is continuously recorded so that the video and still imagery have positional information. Video imagery is accompanied by continuous, simultaneous commentary by a geologist and a biologist aboard the aircraft. The imagery and commentary are used in the definition of discrete along-shore coastal habitat units and the mapping of observed physical, geomorphic, sedimentary, and biological across-shore components within those units. Units are digitized as shoreline segments in ArcGIS, then integrated with the along-shore and across-shore geological and biological data attribute tables housed in the geodatabase. Mapped habitat features include degree of wave exposure, substrate type, sediment texture, intertidal biota, and some nearshore subtidal biota.</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
Service Item Id: 334a2367ceb546c39f21bb1c5411231b
Copyright Text: The ShoreZone Coastal Habitat Mapping Program is supported by a partnership of federal, state, provincial, local, and private agencies. Project management, mapping, and master database maintenance is the responsibility of Coastal and Ocean Resources, Inc. in Victoria, British Columbia. Please see ShoreZone.org or CoastalAndOceans.com for a list of partner agencies and related web sites.