Data

National Ecosystem Accounts - Rivers 2025

data.gov.au
Environmental and Thematic Statistics (Owned by)
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=http://data.gov.au/data/dataset/a01335f8-0a00-4e2f-9346-14bf0f1b59d6&rft.title=National Ecosystem Accounts - Rivers 2025&rft.identifier=national-ecosystem-accounts-rivers-2025&rft.publisher=data.gov.au&rft.description=Rivers NEAP 2025 Shapefile - # Ecosystem Functional Group\t\r\n**Field Name**\r\n\r\nIUCNGET\r\n\r\n**Description**\r\n\r\nSix categories from IUCN Global Ecosystem Typology (IUCN GET). \r\nThere are two perennial categories: \r\n\r\n* 1.1 - Permanent upland streams \r\n\r\n* 1.2 - Permanent lowland rivers\r\n\r\n\r\nAnd four non-perennial categories:\r\n\r\n* 1.3 - Freeze-thaw rivers and streams\r\n\r\n* 1.4 - Seasonal upland streams\r\n\r\n* 1.5 - Seasonal lowland rivers\r\n\r\n* 1.6 - Episodic arid rivers\r\n\r\n# River Region\r\n**Field Name**\r\n\r\nRivRegion\r\n\r\n**Description**\r\n\r\n© Commonwealth of Australia (Bureau of Meteorology) 2022. These are reporting regions for major river catchments in Australia. They are sourced from the Regions product within Geofabric v3.3.\r\n\r\n# State Name\r\n**Field Name**\r\n\r\nSTATE_NAME\r\n\r\n**Description**\r\n\r\nState and Territory names. For the purposes of this product, Jervis Bay is included in the ACT.\r\n\r\n# Land Use Intensity\r\n**Field Names**\r\n\r\nLUI_2010_11, LUI_2015_16, LUI_2020_21\r\n\r\n**Description**\r\n\r\nLand Use Intensity (LUI) for the financial year. For example LUI_2010_11 provides the LUI for the 2010–11 financial year. The first five categories are ranked in order of increasing intensity:\r\n\r\n* 1: Conservation and natural environments \r\n\r\n* 2: Production from relatively natural environments \r\n\r\n* 3: Production from dryland agriculture and plantations \r\n\r\n* 4: Production from irrigated agriculture and plantations \r\n\r\n* 5: Intensive uses \r\n\r\n* Category 6 shows areas where water obscures land use.This dataset presents extent and condition data for Australian rivers and streams for three time periods: 2010–11, 2015–16 and 2020–21.\r\n\r\nFreshwater ecological condition, especially that of rivers, is known to be influenced strongly by adjacent land use. Land Use Intensity (LUI), extracted from the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARES) Land Use data [(Land use of Australia 2010–11 to 2020–21)](https://www.agriculture.gov.au/abares/aclump/land-use/land-use-of-australia-2010-11-to-2020-21), is used as a proxy for inferring the condition (landscape characteristic) of freshwater ecosystems. \r\n\r\nLand Use Intensity (LUI) is defined by the ALUM classification [(Australian Land Use and Management Classification Version 8 (October 2016))](https://www.agriculture.gov.au/abares/aclump/land-use/alum-classification) as a measure of the intensity of different land uses, with the primary classes ordered from 1 (mostly natural) to 5 (intensive uses) in terms of increasing intensity. Category 6 represents areas obscured by water bodies. These areas are excluded from the ordinal classification as they do not have associated land-use intensity levels, thus cannot be used as a proxy for river condition.\r\n\r\nThe data was compiled using river extent data sourced from the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) [Geofabric v3.3](https://www.bom.gov.au/water/geofabric). River segments were created based on two characteristics: River Region, which are reporting regions for major river catchments in Australia, sourced from the Regions product within the BoM Geofabric v3.3; and Ecosystem Functional Group (EFG), which is the finest level of the [International Union for Conservation of Nature’s](https://iucn.org/) [Global Ecosystem Typology](https://global-ecosystems.org/) (IUCN GET) classification system.\r\n\r\nThe river segments were further broken down by assigning the LUI category for each of the corresponding time periods. Spatial layers representing Land Use Intensity were overlaid with river segments, allowing each segment to inherit the LUI classification from the adjacent land use. The subsequent river fragments were then grouped into multipart line features, with each feature representing a unique combination of River Region, EFG, and LUI for each period. This process is described in the [National Ecosystem Accounts, experimental estimates Methodology](https://www.abs.gov.au/methodologies/national-ecosystem-accounts-experimental-estimates-methodology/2020-21).\r\n\r\nThis dataset was used to produce summary statistics for the [National Ecosystem Accounts, experimental estimates](https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/environment/environmental-accounts/national-ecosystem-accounts-experimental-estimates/2020-21). The statistics provide an overview of river condition across river regions, states and territories, based on the total length of rivers that fall within each of the LUI categories. &rft.creator=Environmental and Thematic Statistics&rft.date=2025&rft_rights=notspecified&rft_subject=ABS&rft_subject=Australian Bureau of Statistics&rft_subject=IUCN GET&rft_subject=National Ecosystem Accounts&rft_subject=River Condition&rft_subject=River Regions&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Brief description

This dataset presents extent and condition data for Australian rivers and streams for three time periods: 2010–11, 2015–16 and 2020–21.

Freshwater ecological condition, especially that of rivers, is known to be influenced strongly by adjacent land use. Land Use Intensity (LUI), extracted from the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics (ABARES) Land Use data [(Land use of Australia 2010–11 to 2020–21)](https://www.agriculture.gov.au/abares/aclump/land-use/land-use-of-australia-2010-11-to-2020-21), is used as a proxy for inferring the condition (landscape characteristic) of freshwater ecosystems.

Land Use Intensity (LUI) is defined by the ALUM classification [(Australian Land Use and Management Classification Version 8 (October 2016))](https://www.agriculture.gov.au/abares/aclump/land-use/alum-classification) as a measure of the intensity of different land uses, with the primary classes ordered from 1 (mostly natural) to 5 (intensive uses) in terms of increasing intensity. Category 6 represents areas obscured by water bodies. These areas are excluded from the ordinal classification as they do not have associated land-use intensity levels, thus cannot be used as a proxy for river condition.

The data was compiled using river extent data sourced from the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM) [Geofabric v3.3](https://www.bom.gov.au/water/geofabric). River segments were created based on two characteristics: River Region, which are reporting regions for major river catchments in Australia, sourced from the Regions product within the BoM Geofabric v3.3; and Ecosystem Functional Group (EFG), which is the finest level of the [International Union for Conservation of Nature’s](https://iucn.org/) [Global Ecosystem Typology](https://global-ecosystems.org/) (IUCN GET) classification system.

The river segments were further broken down by assigning the LUI category for each of the corresponding time periods. Spatial layers representing Land Use Intensity were overlaid with river segments, allowing each segment to inherit the LUI classification from the adjacent land use. The subsequent river fragments were then grouped into multipart line features, with each feature representing a unique combination of River Region, EFG, and LUI for each period. This process is described in the [National Ecosystem Accounts, experimental estimates Methodology](https://www.abs.gov.au/methodologies/national-ecosystem-accounts-experimental-estimates-methodology/2020-21).

This dataset was used to produce summary statistics for the [National Ecosystem Accounts, experimental estimates](https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/environment/environmental-accounts/national-ecosystem-accounts-experimental-estimates/2020-21). The statistics provide an overview of river condition across river regions, states and territories, based on the total length of rivers that fall within each of the LUI categories.

Full description

Rivers NEAP 2025 Shapefile - # Ecosystem Functional Group\t\r\n**Field Name**\r\n\r\nIUCNGET\r\n\r\n**Description**\r\n\r\nSix categories from IUCN Global Ecosystem Typology (IUCN GET). \r\nThere are two perennial categories: \r\n\r\n* 1.1 - Permanent upland streams \r\n\r\n* 1.2 - Permanent lowland rivers\r\n\r\n\r\nAnd four non-perennial categories:\r\n\r\n* 1.3 - Freeze-thaw rivers and streams\r\n\r\n* 1.4 - Seasonal upland streams\r\n\r\n* 1.5 - Seasonal lowland rivers\r\n\r\n* 1.6 - Episodic arid rivers\r\n\r\n# River Region\r\n**Field Name**\r\n\r\nRivRegion\r\n\r\n**Description**\r\n\r\n© Commonwealth of Australia (Bureau of Meteorology) 2022. These are reporting regions for major river catchments in Australia. They are sourced from the Regions product within Geofabric v3.3.\r\n\r\n# State Name\r\n**Field Name**\r\n\r\nSTATE_NAME\r\n\r\n**Description**\r\n\r\nState and Territory names. For the purposes of this product, Jervis Bay is included in the ACT.\r\n\r\n# Land Use Intensity\r\n**Field Names**\r\n\r\nLUI_2010_11, LUI_2015_16, LUI_2020_21\r\n\r\n**Description**\r\n\r\nLand Use Intensity (LUI) for the financial year. For example LUI_2010_11 provides the LUI for the 2010–11 financial year. The first five categories are ranked in order of increasing intensity:\r\n\r\n* 1: Conservation and natural environments \r\n\r\n* 2: Production from relatively natural environments \r\n\r\n* 3: Production from dryland agriculture and plantations \r\n\r\n* 4: Production from irrigated agriculture and plantations \r\n\r\n* 5: Intensive uses \r\n\r\n* Category 6 shows areas where water obscures land use.

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