Skip to main content

National Fish Habitat Partnership (NFHP) 2015 Human Disturbance Data for Alaska linked to HUC12 Watersheds

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2010
End Date
2015
Assessment Date
2015

Citation

Herreman, K., Cooper, A., Daniel, W.M., Ross, J., and Infante, D.M., 2017, National Fish Habitat Partnership (NFHP) 2015 Human Disturbance Data for Alaska linked to HUC12 Watersheds: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/F7ZK5DV7.

Summary

This CSV file contains landscape factors representing anthropogenic disturbances to stream habitats summarized within 6th level Hydrologic Unit Code (HUC12) watersheds of the Watershed Boundary Dataset. The source datasets compiled and attributed to spatial units were identified as being: (1) meaningful for assessing fluvial fish habitat; (2) consistent across the entire study area in the way that they were assembled; (3) broadly representative of conditions in the past 10 years, and (4) of sufficient spatial resolution that they could be used to make valid comparisons among local catchment units. Variables summarized at the HUC12 scale include measures of anthropogenic land uses, population density, roads, dams, mines, culverts, 303d [...]

Contacts

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

Alaska_HUC12_disturbance_data.csv
“CSV”
1.41 MB text/csv
Extension: nfhp2015_alaska_disturbances.zip

Purpose

These data were collected for multiple purposes. First, they were gathered in support of conducting a condition assessment of fish habitat in fluvial waterbodies throughout the United States in support of the National Fish Habitat Partnership (NFHP). Second, these data were intended to be made available to NFHP as well as other users interested in acquiring consistently-organized information over larger regions. This work was supported by local, state, and federal partners of NFHP, including the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Geological Survey. Because the condition assessment was conducted over such a large geographic region, we adopted a landscape approach for assessment which assumed that anthropogenic disturbances as well as natural characteristics in the watersheds affect a given unit of habitat which in turn would affect fishes. It was necessary to use a landscape approach because local measures of habitat or biological indicators of habitat condition are only available at a very small percentage of locations around the country while landscape data are available for every location in the United States.

Map

Spatial Services

ArcGIS Mapping Service

WMS Service

Communities

  • National Fish Habitat Partnership
  • USGS Data Release Products

Tags

Provenance

Data source
Input directly

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/F7ZK5DV7

ArcGIS Service Definition Extension

boundingBox
minY51.1568278424693
minX-179.229655487448
maxY71.4395725901531
maxX179.856674735386
enabledServices
KmlServer
WMSServer
filePathUsed__disk__26/b2/12/26b2128962b408ead0ed9a9fdec0ee572ba4ffab
files
namenfhp2015_alaska_disturbances.sd
titlenfhp2015_alaska_disturbances
contentTypex-gis/x-arcgis-service-def
pathOnDisk__disk__26/b2/12/26b2128962b408ead0ed9a9fdec0ee572ba4ffab
size107925103
dateUploadedFri Feb 28 12:51:23 MST 2020
originalMetadatatrue
namenfhp2015_alaska_disturbances.sd
processingStatesuccess
serviceId58769ea9e4b0aa226e1b3cf6
servicePath58769ea9e4b0aa226e1b3cf6

Item Actions

View Item as ...

Save Item as ...

View Item...