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Protecting wetlands in Sydneys Coastal Council Stage 1 Background Information and Literature Review Report Final Report - April 2000
Protecting wetlands in Sydneys Coastal Council Stage 1 Background Information and Literature Review Report Final Report - April 2000
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Repealed - Sydney Regional Environmental Plan (Sydney Harbour Catchment) 2005
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This is a repealed State Environmental Planning Policy and has been superseded by the State Environmental Planning Policy (Biodiversity & Conservation) 2021 as part of the Department's initiative to consolidate State Environmental Planning Policies to simplify and provide certainty to the planning system. Click here to go to the State Environmental Planning Policy (Biodiversity & Conservation) 2021 Open Data page: https://www.planningportal.nsw.gov.au/opendata/dataset/state-environmental-planning-policy-biodiversity-conservation-2021 Go to the following link to find out more about the new consolidated SEPPs: https://www.planning.nsw.gov.au/Policy-and-Legislation/State-Environmental-Planning-Policies/Consolidated-state-environmental-planning-policies This historical record represents Strategic Foreshore Sites Points,Heritage,Critical Habitat Area,Wetlands Protection Area,Special Purposes (Boat Repair Facilities and Commercial Marinas),Strategic Harbour Foreshore Sites,Foreshores and Waterways Area Boundary,Sydney Harbour Catchment, Zoning in Sydney Regional Environmental Plan (Sydney Harbour Catchment) 2005
Dept of Environment, Water and Natural Resources - South Australian Heritage Council Annual Report Data
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South Australian Heritage Council Annual Report Data
Dept of Environment, Water and Natural Resources - Ramsar Wetland Areas - South Australia
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This dataset identifies the boundaries of the 6 areas listed in the Ramsar Convention for South Australia. All wetlands within these areas are of international importance are are protected by the Ramsar Convention. The listed areas for SA include: Bool Lagoon, Coongie Lakes, Coorong and Lakes Albert and Alexandrina, Riverland, the Banrock Station Wetland Complex and Piccaninnie Ponds Karst Wetlands.
DCCEEW_Geospatial - Ramsar Wetlands of Australia
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National dataset of Australia's Ramsar Wetlands. The Convention on Wetlands of International Importance (the Ramsar Convention) was signed in Ramsar, Iran on 2 February 1971. The Ramsar Convention aims to halt the worldwide loss of wetlands and to conserve, through wise use and management, those that remain. The Convention encourages member countries to nominate sites containing representative, rare or unique wetlands, or that are important for conserving biological diversity, to the List of Wetlands of International Importance (Ramsar sites). Australia was one of the first countries to become a Contracting Party to the Convention and designated the world's first Ramsar site, Cobourg Peninsula, in 1974. This project was initiated by the Wetlands Section of the Australian Government Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. Spatial data was sourced from the relevant State and Territory agencies and compiled into a single national coverage.
Protecting Wetlands for the Future in Wisconsin - NERRS/NSC(NERRS Science Collaborative)
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Land use change and wetland loss have decreased the ability of estuaries to mitigate storm damage and reduce flooding in Wisconsin’s Douglas County. The loss of these valuable services was apparent in the aftermath of severe storm events that caused significant flooding and damage in 2012. And, as the climate shifts, the region is likely to experience more frequent powerful storms. Strategic wetland protection and restoration planning could help communities work together in protecting wetlands and the services they provide.
Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site 2014 Wetland Study
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The objective of this investigation was to respond to a request for regional assistance for a comprehensive delineation of wetland habitats subject to jurisdiction under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act and all wetlands subject to National Park Service (NPS) procedures for implementing Director’s Order #77–1: Wetland Protection within the floodplain of Blow-Me-Down-Creek upstream and within the immediate area surrounding Blow-Me-Down-Dam on Saint Gaudens National Historic Site (SAGA) lands. This work utilized the U.S Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Interim Regional Supplement to the Corps of Engineers Wetland Delineation Manual: Northeast and Northcentral Region (January 2012) as the primary methodology for making wetland determinations in the field. A total of 3 palustrine wetlands encompassing 7.23 acres of land were identified and delineated from 22 -25 September 2014 within the study area (Fig. 1). Observed wetland habitats were primarily a combination of palustrine, emergent, persistent, habitats (PEM1) and scrub-shrub (PSS) habitats that exhibited extensive soil saturation at the time of the investigation. All of the identified and mapped palustrine wetland systems meet both the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers criteria and the Cowardin et al. (1979) definitions of wetland habitat. No new riverine wetland systems were identified and mapped over the course of this investigation.