Data

Key Ecological Features (points) - SW marine planning region.

Australian Ocean Data Network
Department of the Environment (DoE), Australian Government
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=http://catalogue-aodn.prod.aodn.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/search?uuid=33de4503-38ef-4917-b672-b9bed8719e83&rft.title=Key Ecological Features (points) - SW marine planning region.&rft.identifier=http://catalogue-aodn.prod.aodn.org.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/search?uuid=33de4503-38ef-4917-b672-b9bed8719e83&rft.description=The Bioregional Profile identifies a number of ecological features that are of conservation value because of the role they play in the environment of the South-west Marine Region. Key ecological features meet one or more of the following criteria: 1. a species, group of species, or a community with a regionally important ecological role (e.g. a predator, prey that affects a large biomass or number of other marine species); 2. a species, group of species, or a community that is nationally or regionally important for biodiversity; 3. an area or habitat that is nationally or regionally important for: a) enhanced or high productivity (such as predictable upwellings - an upwelling occurs when cold nutrient-rich waters from the bottom of the ocean rise to the surface); b) aggregations of marine life (such as feeding, resting, breeding or nursery areas); c) biodiversity and endemism (species which only occur in a specific area); or 4. a unique seafloor feature, with known or presumed ecological properties of regional significance. Key ecological features have been identified by the Australian Government on the basis of advice from scientists about the ecological processes and characteristics of the area. A workshop held in Perth in September 2006 also contributed to this scientific advice and helped to underpin the identification of key ecological features. Sixteen KEFs have been identified in the South-west Marine Region: 1. Commonwealth marine environment surrounding the Houtman Abrolhos Islands 2. Perth Canyon and adjacent shelf break, and other west coast canyons 3. Commonwealth marine environment within and adjacent to the west coast inshore lagoons 4. Commonwealth marine environment within and adjacent to Geographe Bay 5. Cape Mentelle upwelling 6. Naturaliste Plateau 7. Diamantina Fracture Zone 8. Albany Canyons group and adjacent shelf break 9. Commonwealth marine environment surrounding the Recherche Archipelago 10. Ancient coastline at 90-120 m depth 11. Kangaroo Island Pool, canyons and adjacent shelf break, and Eyre Peninsula upwellings. 12. Meso-scale eddies (points). 13. Western demersal slope and associated fish communities. 14. Western rock lobster. 15. Benthic invertebrate communities of the eastern Great Australian Bight. No spatial representation available. 16. Small pelagic fish of the South-west Marine Region. No spatial representation available. In order to create a spatial representation of KEFs for the South-west Marine Region, some interpretation of the information was required. DoE has made every effort to use the best available spatial information, and best judgement on how to spatially represent the features based on the scientific advice provided. This does not preclude others from making their own interpretation of available information.Maintenance and Update Frequency: notPlannedStatement: The Key Ecological Features layer in this dataset represent the features identified in the South-west Bioregional Profile. The Key Ecological Features point layer was created by digitising the areas identified in workshops and discussions held with relevant scientific experts as part of the development of the Bioregional Profile for the South-west Marine Planning Region. The points are indicative only of the area of each Key Ecological Feature.&rft.creator=Department of the Environment (DoE), Australian Government &rft.date=2007&rft.coverage=westlimit=111.843; southlimit=-36.3173; eastlimit=134.6301; northlimit=-26.1463&rft.coverage=westlimit=111.843; southlimit=-36.3173; eastlimit=134.6301; northlimit=-26.1463&rft_rights= http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/au/&rft_rights=http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by/2.5/au/88x31.png&rft_rights=WWW:LINK-1.0-http--related&rft_rights=License Graphic&rft_rights=Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Australia License&rft_rights=http://creativecommons.org/international/au/&rft_rights=WWW:LINK-1.0-http--related&rft_rights=WWW:LINK-1.0-http--related&rft_rights=License Text&rft_rights=The citation in a list of references is: citation author name/s (year metadata published), metadata title. Citation author organisation/s. File identifier and Data accessed at (add http link). Key Ecological Features - South-west Marine Planning Region (c) Commonwealth of Australia, Australian Government Department of Environment, 2011&rft_rights=Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Australia License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/au&rft_subject=oceans&rft_subject=Marine Planning Regions (Australia) | South-west&rft_subject=Marine Planning&rft_subject=Conservation&rft_subject=Biodiversity&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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The citation in a list of references is: citation author name/s (year metadata published), metadata title. Citation author organisation/s. File identifier and Data accessed at (add http link).

Key Ecological Features - South-west Marine Planning Region (c) Commonwealth of Australia, Australian Government Department of Environment, 2011

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Brief description

The Bioregional Profile identifies a number of ecological features that are of conservation value because of the role they play in the environment of the South-west Marine Region. Key ecological features meet one or more of the following criteria:

1. a species, group of species, or a community with a regionally important ecological role (e.g. a predator, prey that affects a large biomass or number of other marine species);

2. a species, group of species, or a community that is nationally or regionally important for biodiversity;

3. an area or habitat that is nationally or regionally important for:
a) enhanced or high productivity (such as predictable upwellings - an upwelling occurs when cold nutrient-rich waters from the bottom of the ocean rise to the surface);
b) aggregations of marine life (such as feeding, resting, breeding or nursery areas);
c) biodiversity and endemism (species which only occur in a specific area); or

4. a unique seafloor feature, with known or presumed ecological properties of regional significance.


Key ecological features have been identified by the Australian Government on the basis of advice from scientists about the ecological processes and characteristics of the area. A workshop held in Perth in September 2006 also contributed to this scientific advice and helped to underpin the identification of key ecological features.

Sixteen KEFs have been identified in the South-west Marine Region:

1. Commonwealth marine environment surrounding the Houtman Abrolhos Islands
2. Perth Canyon and adjacent shelf break, and other west coast canyons
3. Commonwealth marine environment within and adjacent to the west coast inshore lagoons
4. Commonwealth marine environment within and adjacent to Geographe Bay
5. Cape Mentelle upwelling
6. Naturaliste Plateau
7. Diamantina Fracture Zone
8. Albany Canyons group and adjacent shelf break
9. Commonwealth marine environment surrounding the Recherche Archipelago
10. Ancient coastline at 90-120 m depth
11. Kangaroo Island Pool, canyons and adjacent shelf break, and Eyre Peninsula upwellings.
12. Meso-scale eddies (points).
13. Western demersal slope and associated fish communities.
14. Western rock lobster.
15. Benthic invertebrate communities of the eastern Great Australian Bight. No spatial representation available.
16. Small pelagic fish of the South-west Marine Region. No spatial representation available.


In order to create a spatial representation of KEFs for the South-west Marine Region, some interpretation of the information was required. DoE has made every effort to use the best available spatial information, and best judgement on how to spatially represent the features based on the scientific advice provided. This does not preclude others from making their own interpretation of available information.

Lineage

Maintenance and Update Frequency: notPlanned
Statement: The Key Ecological Features layer in this dataset represent the features identified in the South-west Bioregional Profile. The Key Ecological Features point layer was created by digitising the areas identified in workshops and discussions held with relevant scientific experts as part of the development of the Bioregional Profile for the South-west Marine Planning Region. The points are indicative only of the area of each Key Ecological Feature.

Created: 01 10 2007

Data time period: 01 10 2007

This dataset is part of a larger collection

Click to explore relationships graph

134.6301,-26.1463 134.6301,-36.3173 111.843,-36.3173 111.843,-26.1463 134.6301,-26.1463

123.23655,-31.2318

text: westlimit=111.843; southlimit=-36.3173; eastlimit=134.6301; northlimit=-26.1463

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Identifiers
  • global : 33de4503-38ef-4917-b672-b9bed8719e83