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River Condition Index (RCI)
The NSW River Condition Index (RCI) is the primary long-term reporting tool for assessing riverine condition. It is used to combine a range of indicators into a single condition score. The indicators include riparian vegetation, geomorphic condition, hydrologic stress, biodiversity, catchment disturbance and water quality. The RCI was developed using the Framework for the Assessment of River and Wetland Health (FARWH) approach. The FARWH is an accepted approach applied throughout Australia. The FARWH method uses existing data collection activities and converts them into a standardised and nationally comparable representation of river health. The River Condition Index: method document provides a detailed explanation of the index and how it has been applied across NSW.
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Maggie Creek Water Quality Data for Ecological Proper Functioning Condition Analysis
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These data are "standard" water quality parameters collected for surface water condition analysis (for example pH, conductivity, DO, TSS). This dataset is associated with the following publication: Kozlowski, D., R. Hall , S. Swanson, and D. Heggem. Linking Management and Riparian Physical Functions to Water Quality and Aquatic Habitat. JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT. American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), Reston, VA, USA, 8(8): 797-815, (2016).
Maggie Creek Water Quality Data for Ecological Proper Functioning Condition Analysis
공공데이터포털
These data are "standard" water quality parameters collected for surface water condition analysis (for example pH, conductivity, DO, TSS). This dataset is associated with the following publication: Kozlowski, D., R. Hall , S. Swanson, and D. Heggem. Linking Management and Riparian Physical Functions to Water Quality and Aquatic Habitat. JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT. American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), Reston, VA, USA, 8(8): 797-815, (2016).
Riparian proper functioning condition assessment to improve watershed management for water quality
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No data. This dataset is not publicly accessible because: No data. It can be accessed through the following means: No data. Format: No data. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Swanson, S., D. Kozlowski, R. Hall , D. Heggem , and J. Lin. Riparian Proper Functioning Condition (PFC) Assessment to Improve Water Quality. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY. American Society of Agronomy, MADISON, WI, USA, 72(2): 168-172, (2017).
Riparian proper functioning condition assessment to improve watershed management for water quality
공공데이터포털
No data. This dataset is not publicly accessible because: No data. It can be accessed through the following means: No data. Format: No data. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Swanson, S., D. Kozlowski, R. Hall , D. Heggem , and J. Lin. Riparian Proper Functioning Condition (PFC) Assessment to Improve Water Quality. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY. American Society of Agronomy, MADISON, WI, USA, 72(2): 168-172, (2017).
River Risk Ratings
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The River Risk Ratings provide a comprehensive view of how river condition and risk have been assessed across New South Wales over the past three decades. This collection brings together historic and contemporary datasets developed from the 1990s to the present, illustrating the evolution of assessment methodologies used to understand river health, hydrological stress, and ecological vulnerability. Together, these datasets link spatial layers, tabular data, and supporting reports — forming a single point of truth for understanding how NSW river systems have been evaluated through time. The River Risk Ratings are comprised of three key components, each reflecting a distinct period and methodology in river risk assessment: 1. River Risk Ratings – Historic Stress Rivers Assessment (1990s) A historic dataset derived from the original Stress Rivers Approach (SRA) developed during the 1990s, prior to the introduction of the Water Management Act 2000. This early method classified rivers according to stress indicators such as water extraction pressure and ecological condition. It represents one of the first systematic attempts to quantify river stress across NSW and serves as an important baseline for later risk assessments. 2. River Risk Ratings – Historic Macro Risk Assessment (2000s) yet to publish A historic risk dataset developed during the 2000s by water planners. This macro-level assessment expanded on the earlier SRA work by incorporating hydrological and ecological metrics to evaluate risk at the catchment scale. It informed early water-sharing and planning frameworks under the emerging Water Management Act 2000 and provides continuity between the early and modern risk assessment models. 3. River Risk Ratings – Contemporary Risk Assessment (2016–Present) yet to publish The current and ongoing statewide river risk dataset developed from 2016 to the present. It consolidates a decade of river risk ratings into a centralised database, supported by spatial layers and associated reports (including those linked to the MDBA Water Resource Plans). This represents the most up-to-date and standardised approach to river risk assessment in NSW and forms the operational basis for future updates. How to Access the Data on the SEED Open Data Portal This landing page provides an overview only. To view or download the data, perform the following:,
River Risk Ratings–Historic Stress Rivers Assessment (1990s)
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A historic dataset derived from the original Stress Rivers Approach (SRA) developed during the 1990s, prior to the introduction of the Water Management Act 2000. This early method classified rivers according to stress indicators such as water extraction pressure and ecological condition. It represents one of the first systematic attempts to quantify river stress across NSW and serves as an important baseline for later risk assessments. Note: If you would like to ask a question, make any suggestions, or tell us how you are using this dataset, please visit the NSW Water Hub which has an online forum you can join.
Geospatial and Data Services Manager - Statewide River Water Quality Assessment (DWER-038)
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Statewide River Water Quality Assessment (SRWQA) 2004 & 2008 uses water quality data collected as far back as 1998 to determine the status and trends of nine water quality parameters for all waterways in the state, where consistent data is available. The project was undertaken by the Water Science Branch of the Department of Water and Environmental Regulation in 1999 and 2004 has now been updated to include water quality information up to the end of 2007. This dataset only shows the classifications and trends from the 2004 and 2008 assessment. The Assessment focused on colour, dissolved organic carbon, dissolved oxygen, pH, total nitrogen, total phosphorus, total dissolved salts, total suspended solids and turbidity. A total of 255 sites from 23 basins in Western Australia (out of a total of 44) were included in the 2008 update with 126 of these being assessed for the first time in 2008. In 2004 232 sites were assessed. Due to a lack of data numerous sites that were assessed in 2004 are not included in the 2008 update. Many basins had no data, whilst the others lacked recent monitoring data. The status and trend results were compiled into an excel spreadsheet. Dataset was formerly known as Statewide River Water Quality Assessment (DOW-056)
National Rivers and Streams Assessment 2008/2009 Data file for Report "National Rivers and Streams Assessment 2008-2009: A Collaborative Survey
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The National Rivers and Streams Assessment (NRSA) is a statistical survey of the condition of our nation's perennial rivers and streams. It is designed to provide information on the extent of flowing waters that support healthy biological condition and recreation, estimate how widespread major stressors are that impact the nation’s rivers and streams water quality, and provide insight into whether rivers and streams nationwide are getting cleaner. This dataset is an archived (zipped) file comprised of chemical, physical and biological files used in developing the NRSA (2008/2009) report. Sampling was conducted over two summers (2008/2009) at approximately 2000 sites in the conterminous U.S. Sites were selected using a statistical survey (probabilistic) design. The files include water chemistry, benthic macroinvertebrates, fish assemblage, physical habitat, landscape metrics, enterococci, etc. Users are encouraged to visit the NARS data webpage for updates to data files and data from other surveys. https://www.epa.gov/national-aquatic-resource-surveys/data-national-aquatic-resource-surveys. Citation for the NRSA 2008/2009 archived data: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. National Aquatic Resource Surveys. National Rivers and Streams Report. Archived Data. (INSERT data and metadata files used). Available from U.S. EPA web page: https://www.epa.gov/national-aquatic-resource-surveys/national-rivers-and-streams-assessment-2008-2009-results. EPA encourages users who are publishing subsets of the data (say as part of a journal article publication) to include the above citation. EPA also encourages users of the data to include the following acknowledgement: “The National Rivers and Streams Assessment 2008/2009 data were a result of the collective efforts of dedicated field crews, laboratory staff, data management and quality control staff, analysts and many others from EPA, states, tribes, federal agencies, universities, and other organizations. Please contact nars-hq@epa.gov with any questions.”. Citation information for this dataset can be found in Data.gov's References section.
Quantitative Assessment of Stream and River Physical Habitat Condition
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The 4 resource surveys (coastal, rivers and streams, lakes and reservoirs, and wetlands) each have datasets covering the biological, chemical, physical habitat, hydrologic and watershed data. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Kaufmann, P., R.M. Hughes, S. Paulsen, D. Peck, C. Seeliger, T. Kincaid, and R. Mitchell. Physical Habitat in the Conterminous U.S. Streams and Rivers, Part 2: A Quantitative Assessment of Habitat Condition.. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, USA, 141: 109047, (2022).
Quantitative Assessment of Stream and River Physical Habitat Condition
공공데이터포털
The 4 resource surveys (coastal, rivers and streams, lakes and reservoirs, and wetlands) each have datasets covering the biological, chemical, physical habitat, hydrologic and watershed data. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Kaufmann, P., R.M. Hughes, S. Paulsen, D. Peck, C. Seeliger, T. Kincaid, and R. Mitchell. Physical Habitat in the Conterminous U.S. Streams and Rivers, Part 2: A Quantitative Assessment of Habitat Condition.. ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, USA, 141: 109047, (2022).