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Threatened Plant Plan Living Collection
This dataset contains a list of 200 plant species and their priority as appropriate threatened species for planting in City of Melbourne green spaces. This is based on a Threatened Species Assessment Tool developed by Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria that was used to provide a framework to assess and prioritise the inclusion of threatened species into landscape plantings. The tool includes information and scoring for cultivation requirements, conservation benefits and horticultural potential which are the foundation of the assessment. Additional benefits specific to the City of Melbourne and potential weed threat were also considered as part of the assessment process. Higher priority was given to species which are the most threatened and are indigenous to the City of Melbourne. From this assessment process, a priority list of 56 species has been short-listed as appropriate threatened species for planting. For inclusion in the Threatened Species Assessment Tool, all species were required to be listed as threatened in Victoria. Scores were calculated based on the following: Cultivation Requirements Subtotal = Cultivation Protocols + Propagation Protocols Conservation Subtotal = Germplasm Source + Conservation Status + Germplasm Origin + Provenance + Additional Conservation Benefit Total Score = Cultivation Requirements Subtotal + Conservation Subtotal + Additional Local Benefits Subtotal Total Score including Horticultural Potential = Cultivation Requirements Subtotal + Conservation Subtotal + Additional Local Benefits Subtotal + Horticultural Potential Thresholds were set in certain categories which resulted in the removal of species from priority selection. Species with cells marked with an asterisk (*) were removed from the final priority plant list. In addition, an overall Total Score threshold of 20 was chosen for final species selection. This dataset is based on the “City of Melbourne Threatened Plant Living Collection Plan” produced by R. Larke, M. Hirst and J. Arnott of the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, and N.S.G. Williams of the University of Melbourne. For documented methods please refer to the report (attached).
연관 데이터
Threatened Plant Living Collection Plan
공공데이터포털
This dataset contains a list of 200 plant species and their priority as appropriate threatened species for planting in City of Melbourne green spaces. This is based on a Threatened Species Assessment Tool developed by Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria that was used to provide a framework to assess and prioritise the inclusion of threatened species into landscape plantings. The tool includes information and scoring for cultivation requirements, conservation benefits and horticultural potential which are the foundation of the assessment. Additional benefits specific to the City of Melbourne and potential weed threat were also considered as part of the assessment process. Higher priority was given to species which are the most threatened and are indigenous to the City of Melbourne. From this assessment process, a priority list of 56 species has been short-listed as appropriate threatened species for planting. For inclusion in the Threatened Species Assessment Tool, all species were required to be listed as threatened in Victoria. Scores were calculated based on the following: • Cultivation Requirements Subtotal = Cultivation Protocols + Propagation Protocols • Conservation Subtotal = Germplasm Source + Conservation Status + Germplasm Origin + Provenance + Additional Conservation Benefit • Total Score = Cultivation Requirements Subtotal + Conservation Subtotal + Additional Local Benefits Subtotal • Total Score including Horticultural Potential = Cultivation Requirements Subtotal + Conservation Subtotal + Additional Local Benefits Subtotal + Horticultural Potential Thresholds were set in certain categories which resulted in the removal of species from priority selection. Species with cells marked with an asterisk (*) were removed from the final priority plant list. In addition, an overall Total Score threshold of 20 was chosen for final species selection. This dataset is based on the “City of Melbourne Threatened Plant Living Collection Plan” produced by R. Larke, M. Hirst and J. Arnott of the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, and N.S.G. Williams of the University of Melbourne. For documented methods please refer to the report (attached). The data and report was published in May 2023.
Threatened Plant Living Collection Plan
공공데이터포털
This dataset contains a list of 200 plant species and their priority as appropriate threatened species for planting in City of Melbourne green spaces. This is based on a Threatened Species Assessment Tool developed by Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria that was used to provide a framework to assess and prioritise the inclusion of threatened species into landscape plantings. The tool includes information and scoring for cultivation requirements, conservation benefits and horticultural potential which are the foundation of the assessment. Additional benefits specific to the City of Melbourne and potential weed threat were also considered as part of the assessment process. Higher priority was given to species which are the most threatened and are indigenous to the City of Melbourne. From this assessment process, a priority list of 56 species has been short-listed as appropriate threatened species for planting. For inclusion in the Threatened Species Assessment Tool, all species were required to be listed as threatened in Victoria. Scores were calculated based on the following: • Cultivation Requirements Subtotal = Cultivation Protocols + Propagation Protocols • Conservation Subtotal = Germplasm Source + Conservation Status + Germplasm Origin + Provenance + Additional Conservation Benefit • Total Score = Cultivation Requirements Subtotal + Conservation Subtotal + Additional Local Benefits Subtotal • Total Score including Horticultural Potential = Cultivation Requirements Subtotal + Conservation Subtotal + Additional Local Benefits Subtotal + Horticultural Potential Thresholds were set in certain categories which resulted in the removal of species from priority selection. Species with cells marked with an asterisk (*) were removed from the final priority plant list. In addition, an overall Total Score threshold of 20 was chosen for final species selection. This dataset is based on the “City of Melbourne Threatened Plant Living Collection Plan” produced by R. Larke, M. Hirst and J. Arnott of the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, and N.S.G. Williams of the University of Melbourne. For documented methods please refer to the report (attached). The data and report was published in May 2023.
Threatened Flora Observations
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Threatened flora data derived from the Natural Values Atlas consisting primarily of point locations (Eastings and Northings) and associated attributes for threatened flora in Tasmania. The NVA maintains species taxonomy and provides access to management documents such as listing statements and recovery plans. Additional attribute information is also stored within the NVA, including species values for conservation significance as well as project specific data.
DCCEEW_Geospatial - Threatened Species Action Plan priority species - number occurring across Australia
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This dataset contains the number of Threatened Species Action Plan priority species where they, or their habitat, are known or likely to occur in a 0.05 degree latitude/longitude grid cell containing land in Australia. It is derived from the "Australia - Species of National Environmental Significance Distributions (public grids)" dataset of species listed under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act 1999 which contains species distributions from the Species of National Environmental Significance database after generalisation inline with the Departments Sensitive Species Policy. For more information on the Action Plan and threatened species generally see https://www.dcceew.gov.au/environment/biodiversity/threatened/action-plan and https://www.dcceew.gov.au/environment/biodiversity/threatened/species
The Native Vegetation of the Sydney Metropolitan Area - Version 3.1 (OEH, 2016) VIS ID 4489
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This layer contains digital mapping of the native vegetation communities of the Sydney Metropolitan area. Vegetation communities have been derived from the analysis of 2200 floristic sites collated for the study area. Identified vegetation communities have been related to currently listed threatened ecological communities listed under the NSW TSC Act, 1995 and the Commonwealth EPBC Act, 1999. Native vegetation communities have been mapped using a combination of detailed image interpretation, relationships between sample sites and abiotic environmental variables. The derived digital data layer includes fields that describe the vegetation community, interpreted dominant species and understorey characteristics, interpretation confidence, disturbance type and severity, NSW vegetation formation and classes and related NSW Plant Community Types. These are described in detail in technical reports OEH (2016) The Native Vegetation of the Sydney Metropolitan Area. Volume 1: Technical Report. Version 3.0. Office of Environment and Heritage Sydney. OEH (2016) The Native Vegetation of the Sydney Metropolitan Area. Volume 2: Vegetation Community Profiles. Version 3.0. NSW Office of Environment and Heritage, Sydney. Version 3.0 of the Native Vegetation of the Sydney Metropolitan Area updates the Plant Community Type and Biometric Vegetation Type of each map unit. Version 3.0 replaced version 2.0 (VIS_ID 3817) and created a seamless alignment between the GIS layer and the Plant Community and Biometric Vegetation Types in the Biodiversity Assessment Method tool. These were the only significant updates from version 2.0. Version 3.1 is a minor update. Two new attribute fields were added - PCTID and PCTName. These fields align with the Bionet Vegetation map data standard v1.0(https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/research-and-publications/publications-search/bionet-vegetation-map-data-standard-version-1). PCTID was populated by the v3.0 attribute field, PCT_code. PCTName was populated by extracting the corresponding PCT common name from the Bionet Vegetation Classification web service (https://data.bionet.nsw.gov.au/). No other changes were made to the vegetation map. VIS_ID 4489
DCCEEW_Geospatial - Density of indicative threatened ecological community distributions
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Download ServicesThe density of indicative threatened ecological community distributions is derived from the Department's ecological communities of national environmental significance data. Threatened Ecological Communities (TEC) distributions contain three categories to indicate where their habitat is known, likely or may occur across Australia. The spatial input data was filtered using the following criteria:1. Distributions for EPBC Act (1999) listed TECs that are Matters of National Environmental Significance (critically endangered or endangered).2. Contains ‘known’ and/or ‘likely to occur’ habitat categories.3. Marine TECs are includedThe number of overlaps for each distribution in the selected feature set were counted and gridded to a 0.01 decimal degree (~1km) cell size. Note projecting the data will alter the cell size. The source distribution for each TEC is determined independently of others and is indicative in nature. As such, a count higher than one may indicate:• TECs have been mapped in the same habitat or• TECs are mapped adjacent within the same 1km grid cell or• TECs distributions have been mapped at different scales or levels of detailGiven the indicative nature of the source data which includes data of a range of quality and currency, this output should be used as a guide to the location of TECs across the country.The selection of TEC distributions for inclusion in the count is based on the EPBC Act list of TECs and spatial data in the Department enterprise GIS as at the revision date in the metadata. Current EPBC Act listed TECs are described in the Species Profiles and Threats application (SPRAT: https://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/sprat/public/sprat.pl).
Summary Data: Threatened Species Occurrences by Terrestrial Ecoregion
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Summary of species occurrence data from 1900 to 2020 for Australian terrestrial species organised by IBRA region and EPBC status. Counts are provided by species and IBRA region for: The total number of occurrence records within the region, for a given EPBC status and time period The number of distinct species recorded within the region, for a given EPBC status and time period Occurrence records were aggregated and organised by the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA, https://ala.org.au/) and include survey and monitoring data collected and managed by the Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS, https://imos.org.au/) and the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network (TERN, https://tern.org.au/). To find out more about this dataset, visit: https://ecoassets.org.au/data/summary-data-threatened-species-occurrences-by-terrestrial-ecoregion/ DOI: https://doi.org/10.26197/ala.160f789e-ee11-45c0-93c3-5c87318d78c0
Delineation of important habitats of threatened plant species in south eastern New South Wales
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Research report to the Australian Heritage Commission, December 1990 by J.D. Briggs and J.H. Leigh. Detailed reports of field surveys in SE NSW for 11 of the 25 endangered species and 11 if the 79 vulnerable species within the report area. The surveys were conducted over a three year period and commenced in April 1986.
DCCEEW_Geospatial - Density of threatened and migratory species habitat distributions
공공데이터포털
Download ServicesThe density of threatened and migratory species distributions grid is derived from the Department's Species of National Environmental Significance modelled distribution data. All threatened and most migratory species, for which Australia is part of the normal range, are modelled using three categories to indicate where their habitat is known, likely or may occur across Australia. The spatial input data was filtered using the following criteria:1. Distributions for EPBC Act (1999) listed species that are Matters of National Environmental Significance (vulnerable, endangered, critically endangered, extinct in the wild or migratory – where mapped within the Australian context)2. Contains ‘known’ and/or ‘likely to occur’ modelled habitat categories. Species with only ‘may occur’ habitat modelled are not included in the counts.3. High-level habitat filtering based on taxonomy, EPBC Act status and traits to include only terrestrial species or species that have some portion of their lifecycle modelled in terrestrial (freshwater aquatic, estuarine, shore-based or intertidal) environments. This includes all plants (including mangroves), migratory marine species that have mapped breeding sites on land, such as marine turtles or birds, and any animals that move between freshwater, estuarine and marine environments. In some cases, for migratory birds, full range distributions are not mapped and only the known and likely breeding habitat is mapped on land. Where a broader distribution including marine habitats has been mapped, the known and likely categories have been clipped to the Commonwealth of Australia (Geoscience Australia) GEODATA COAST 100K 2004. External territories and islands not present in the 100k coastline dataset are therefore not represented in this derived dataset.The number of overlaps for each distribution in the selected feature set were counted and gridded to a 0.01 decimal degree (~1km) cell size. For example, a value of 20 indicates that there is known or likely habitat for twenty threatened or migratory species modelled in that 1km square. Note projecting the data will alter the cell size.The counts do not necessarily indicate the presence of a species. Given the indicative nature of the input data, this dataset should be used only as guide showing the density of modelled terrestrial habitat of threatened and migratory species across Australia. Unsuitable habitat such as built-up or fire-affected areas are not necessarily removed from the input species distribution models. This is particularly true for broad-ranging species and for species where it is important to account for habitat fragmentation and fauna moving through the landscape. Modelled distributions may therefore encompass areas where a threatened species may not be found.The dataset is updated regularly to reflect updates to the Species of National Environmental Significance data.The initial raster stretch in ArcGIS Online Map Viewer may appear dark. To improve visibility, it is recommended to change Image Enhancement: Symbology Type to Unique Values and apply a suitable colour ramp.
Australian Government Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water - Threatened Species and Ecological Communities of National Environmental Significance
공공데이터포털
__Threatened Species of National Environmental Significance__ This dataset contains information about species of national environmental significance as listed in the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act). Data provided includes: - species names and threatened status - indicative occurrence within each state, territory and marine area - links to further information in the [Species Profile and Threats Database](http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/sprat/public/sprat.pl) (SPRAT). The dataset is updated as the lists of species on schedules of the EPBC Act are amended. There is one row entry for each listed species. Links to other species information sourced from SPRAT can be made using the field containing the listed taxon identification number (ListedId). A description of the fields and methods used to create the data can be found in the explanatory notes resource. [More about threatened species](http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/threatened) __Ecological Communities of National Environmental Significance (Threatened Ecological Communities)__ This dataset contains information about ecological communities of national environmental significance as listed in the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (EPBC Act). Data provided includes: - ecological community name and threatened status - indicative occurrence within each state and territory - links to further information in the [Species Profile and Threats Database](http://www.environment.gov.au/cgi-bin/sprat/public/sprat.pl) (SPRAT). The dataset is updated as the lists of ecological communities on schedules of the EPBC Act are amended. There is one row entry for each listed ecological community. Links to other ecological community information sourced from SPRAT can be made using the field containing the listed community identification number (ECId). A description of the fields and methods used to create the data can be found in the explanatory notes resource. [More about ecological communities](http://www.environment.gov.au/biodiversity/threatened) _Credit:_ Department of the Environment (2015). Species Profile and Threats Database, Department of the Environment, Canberra.