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Coastal seagrass habitat suitability model (wet and dry season) in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area (MTSRF, JCU)

This dataset is consists of modelled habitat suitability of coastal seagrass distribution in the wet and dry seasons along the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area coastline.



A Bayesian belief network was used to quantify the relationship (dependencies) between seagrass and eight environmental drivers: relative wave exposure, bathymetry, spatial extent of flood plumes, season, substrate, region, tidal range and sea surface temperature.



We found that at the scale of the entire GBRWHA, the main drivers of inshore seagrass presence are tidal range and relative exposure. The outputs of our analysis included a probabilistic GIS-surface of inshore seagrass presence and distribution for both the wet and dry seasons, and across four regions at the scale of 2km*2km planning units. The model can be used by managers in the GBRWHA to delineate seagrass ecological units, and assist them in marine planning at broad spatial scales.



For more information about methods see: Grech, A. and Coles, R.J. 2010, An ecosystem-scale predictive model of coastal seagrass distribution, Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 20: 437-444



Data Location:



This dataset is filed in the eAtlas enduring data repository at: data\MTSRF\QLD_MTSRF-1-1-3_JCU_Grech-A_Seagrass-coastal-model-2007

Simple

Identification info

Date (Publication)
2009-11-01T00:00:00
Cited responsible party
Role Organisation Name Telephone Delivery point City Administrative area Postal code Country Electronic mail address
Principal investigator Macquarie University (MQ) Grech, Alana, Dr Voice Facsimile alana.grech@mq.edu.au
Collaborator TropWATER, James Cook University (JCU) Coles, Rob, Dr Voice Rob.Coles@jcu.edu.au
Purpose
Ecosystem-scale networks of marine protected areas (MPA) are an important planning tool, but the information used to delineate ecological units is difficult to quantify at broad spatial scales because of the cost associated with collecting information at that scale. The Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area (GBRWHA) is the world’s largest World Heritage area (approximately 348,000 km2) and second largest MPA. To inform the management of inshore (<15 m) seagrass communities at the scale of the entire GBRWHA, we determined their presence and distribution at a regional and sub- regional scale by generating a GIS-based habitat model.
Status
Completed
Point of contact
Role Organisation Name Telephone Delivery point City Administrative area Postal code Country Electronic mail address
Custodian TropWATER, James Cook University (JCU) Coles, Rob, Dr Voice Rob.Coles@jcu.edu.au
Spatial representation type
Grid

Spatial resolution

Spatial resolution
2
Topic category
  • Biota

Extent

Extent

Temporal extent

Time position
2005-01-01T00:00:00
Time position
2007-12-31T00:00:00

Extent

Extent





Keywords (Theme)
  • marine

Resource constraints

Linkage
http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by/3.0/au/88x31.png

License Graphic

Title
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia License
Cited responsible party
Role Organisation Name Telephone Delivery point City Administrative area Postal code Country Electronic mail address
Website
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/

License Text

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Distribution Information

Distribution format
  • ARC/INFO raster grid files

OnLine resource
Original data in ArcInfo Binary Grid (from Tropical Data Hub). Note: This version has no projection information and an excess extent. (270 KB)

OnLine resource
GeoTiff conversion by eAtlas - fix of the GIS problems. (46 KB)

OnLine resource
ea:GBR_JCU_Seagrass-coastal-model-2007_Dry-season

OnLine resource
ea:GBR_JCU_Seagrass-coastal-model-2007_Wet-season

OnLine resource
Grech, Alana (2009) Spatial models and risk assessments to inform marine planning at ecosystem-scales: seagrasses and dugongs as a case study. PhD thesis, James Cook University.

OnLine resource
Grech, A. and Coles, R.J. 2010, An ecosystem-scale predictive model of coastal seagrass distribution, Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 20: 437-444

OnLine resource
eAtlas Web Mapping Service (WMS) (AIMS)

Resource lineage

Statement
This dataset was developed as part of a Alana Grech's PhD: "Spatial models and risk assessments to inform marine planning at ecosystem-scales: seagrasses and dugongs as a case study", James Cook University, 2009.
Hierarchy level
Dataset

Reference System Information

Reference system identifier
EPSG/EPSG:4283

Metadata

Metadata identifier
urn:uuid/284c3108-accc-4739-a4b1-4ec13c3cc0c6

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8
Contact
Role Organisation Name Telephone Delivery point City Administrative area Postal code Country Electronic mail address
Point of contact Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) eAtlas Data Manager Voice Facsimile PRIVATE MAIL BAG 3, TOWNSVILLE MAIL CENTRE Townsville Queensland 4810 Australia e-atlas@aims.gov.au
Parent metadata

Type of resource

Resource scope
Dataset
Metadata linkage
https://eatlas.org.au/data/uuid/284c3108-accc-4739-a4b1-4ec13c3cc0c6

Point of truth URL of this metadata record

Date info (Creation)
2016-08-01T16:40:40
Date info (Revision)
2024-10-28T07:15:48.673Z

Metadata standard

Title
ISO 19115-3:2018
 
 

Overviews

large_thumbnail

Spatial extent

Keywords

marine


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Access to the catalogue
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