hi_otp_all_fishing_com_line
eng
UTF8
dataset
service
Carrie V. Kappel
National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)
kappel@nceas.ucsb.edu
http://oceantippingpoints.org/about-us/people#Carrie
http
web browser
information
pointOfContact
2021-03-30
ISO 19115-2 Geographic Information - Metadata Part 2 Extensions for imagery and gridded data
ISO 19115-2:2009(E)
2
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6990
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Commercial Line Fishing Estimated Average Annual Catch of Reef Fish, 2003-2013 - Hawaii
2017-04-18
creation
2017-04-18
issued
2017-04-18
revision
org.pacioos
hi_otp_all_fishing_com_line
Carrie V. Kappel
National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)
kappel@nceas.ucsb.edu
http://oceantippingpoints.org/about-us/people#Carrie
http
web browser
information
principalInvestigator
Kimberly A. Selkoe
National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)
selkoe@nceas.ucsb.edu
http://oceantippingpoints.org/about-us/people#Kim
http
web browser
information
originator
Ocean Tipping Points (OTP)
info@oceantippingpoints.org
http://oceantippingpoints.org
http
web browser
information
resourceProvider
Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS)
info@pacioos.org
http://pacioos.org
http
web browser
information
publisher
Related publications: Wedding LM, Lecky J, Gove JM, Walecka HR, Donovan MK, et al. (2018) Advancing the integration of spatial data to map human and natural drivers on coral reefs. PLOS ONE 13(3): e0189792. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189792; McCoy KS, Williams ID, Friedlander AM, Ma H, Teneva L, Kittinger JN (2018) Estimating nearshore coral reef-associated fisheries production from the main Hawaiian Islands. PLoS ONE 13(4): e0195840. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195840.
Nearshore fisheries in the Main Hawaiian Islands encompass a diverse group of fishers using a wide array of gears and targeting many different species. Communities in Hawaii often rely on these fisheries for economic, social, and cultural services. However, the stress from overfishing can cause ecosystem degradation and long-term economic loss. This layer represents the average annual commercial catch of reef fish by line fishing over the years 2003-2013 as reported in commercial catch data collected by the State of Hawaii Department of Aquatic Resources (DAR) Commercial Marine Landings Database (CML). "Line fishing" is a fairly broad category that can include casting, trolling, hand line, short line, and others. These gears were grouped together for consistency with non-commercial catch estimates from McCoy et al. (2018). Commercial catch is reported to DAR in large irregular reporting blocks by gear and by species.
This layer's spatial footprint aligns with the inshore commercial reporting blocks from the shapefile served on the Hawaii Statewide GIS Program website (Fishchart2008.shp) (http://planning.hawaii.gov/gis/download-gis-data/). Data are filtered by DAR before release such that reporting blocks with less than three fishers reporting are excluded in order to protect fisher identities. It is not possible to explicitly distinguish between boat-based and shore-based fishing based on the gear types reported in CML data. The Ocean Tipping Points (OTP) project filtered the data for line fishing and reef fish species only and calculated average annual catch in kilograms by reporting block to match with data from the Marine Recreational Information Program (MRIP). In marine protected areas (MPAs) where boat-based fishing is not allowed, catch was set to zero; and inside de facto MPAs with restricted access, catch was reduced according to expert input and local knowledge. Average annual commercial catch data were converted from polygon to raster and then divided by the number of 100-m raster cells within each reporting block so that units are comparable to non-commercial fishing layers (kg/ha). The result assumes commercial catch is evenly distributed spatially across each reporting block.
This layer was developed as part of a geospatial database of key anthropogenic pressures to coastal waters of the Main Hawaiian Islands for the Ocean Tipping Points (OTP) project (http://oceantippingpoints.org). Ocean tipping points occur when shifts in human use or environmental conditions result in large, and sometimes abrupt, impacts to marine ecosystems. The ability to predict and understand ocean tipping points can enhance ecosystem management, including critical coral reef management and policies to protect ecosystem services produced by coral reefs. The goal of the Ocean Tipping Points Hawaii case study was to gather, process, and map spatial information on environmental and human-based drivers of coral reef ecosystem conditions.
The Ocean Tipping Points project, 2016. Please acknowledge the Ocean Tipping Points project as a source when these data are used in the preparation of reports, papers, publications, maps, and other products. When applying these data for publication, please reference and cite the following journal article: Wedding LM, Lecky J, Gove JM, Walecka HR, Donovan MK, et al. (2018) Advancing the integration of spatial data to map human and natural drivers on coral reefs. PLOS ONE 13(3): e0189792. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189792.
Carrie V. Kappel
National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)
kappel@nceas.ucsb.edu
http://oceantippingpoints.org/about-us/people#Carrie
http
web browser
information
pointOfContact
http://pacioos.org/metadata/browse/hi_otp_all_fishing_com_line.png
Sample image.
Earth Science > Agriculture > Agricultural Aquatic Sciences > Fisheries
Earth Science > Biosphere > Aquatic Ecosystems > Reef Habitat
Earth Science > Biosphere > Ecosystems > Marine Ecosystems > Reef > Coral Reef
Earth Science > Human Dimensions > Environmental Impacts
Earth Science > Human Dimensions > Human Settlements > Coastal Areas
Earth Science > Human Dimensions > Sustainability > Environmental Sustainability
Earth Science > Oceans > Aquatic Sciences > Fisheries
Earth Science > Oceans > Coastal Processes > Coral Reefs
theme
GCMD Science Keywords
Continent > North America > United States Of America > Hawaii
Ocean > Pacific Ocean > Central Pacific Ocean > Hawaiian Islands
place
GCMD Location Keywords
PacIOOS > Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System
project
GCMD Project Keywords
PacIOOS > Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System
dataCenter
GCMD Data Center Keywords
Please contact the Ocean Tipping Points (OTP) project in advance of applying these data to project work so that the principal investigator, Carrie Kappel (kappel@nceas.ucsb.edu), can track and communicate data uses and ensure no duplicate efforts are underway. The data may be used and redistributed for free but is not intended for legal use, since it may contain inaccuracies. Neither the data Contributor, University of Hawaii, PacIOOS, NOAA, State of Hawaii nor the United States Government, nor any of their employees or contractors, makes any warranty, express or implied, including warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose, or assumes any legal liability for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness, of this information.
Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS)
largerWorkCitation
project
eng
biota
environment
farming
oceans
society
1
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Commercial Line Fishing Estimated Average Annual Catch of Reef Fish, 2003-2013 - Hawaii
2017-04-18
creation
2017-04-18
issued
2017-04-18
revision
Carrie V. Kappel
National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)
kappel@nceas.ucsb.edu
http://oceantippingpoints.org/about-us/people#Carrie
http
web browser
information
principalInvestigator
Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS)
info@pacioos.org
http://pacioos.org
http
web browser
information
publisher
Nearshore fisheries in the Main Hawaiian Islands encompass a diverse group of fishers using a wide array of gears and targeting many different species. Communities in Hawaii often rely on these fisheries for economic, social, and cultural services. However, the stress from overfishing can cause ecosystem degradation and long-term economic loss. This layer represents the average annual commercial catch of reef fish by line fishing over the years 2003-2013 as reported in commercial catch data collected by the State of Hawaii Department of Aquatic Resources (DAR) Commercial Marine Landings Database (CML). "Line fishing" is a fairly broad category that can include casting, trolling, hand line, short line, and others. These gears were grouped together for consistency with non-commercial catch estimates from McCoy et al. (2018). Commercial catch is reported to DAR in large irregular reporting blocks by gear and by species.
This layer's spatial footprint aligns with the inshore commercial reporting blocks from the shapefile served on the Hawaii Statewide GIS Program website (Fishchart2008.shp) (http://planning.hawaii.gov/gis/download-gis-data/). Data are filtered by DAR before release such that reporting blocks with less than three fishers reporting are excluded in order to protect fisher identities. It is not possible to explicitly distinguish between boat-based and shore-based fishing based on the gear types reported in CML data. The Ocean Tipping Points (OTP) project filtered the data for line fishing and reef fish species only and calculated average annual catch in kilograms by reporting block to match with data from the Marine Recreational Information Program (MRIP). In marine protected areas (MPAs) where boat-based fishing is not allowed, catch was set to zero; and inside de facto MPAs with restricted access, catch was reduced according to expert input and local knowledge. Average annual commercial catch data were converted from polygon to raster and then divided by the number of 100-m raster cells within each reporting block so that units are comparable to non-commercial fishing layers (kg/ha). The result assumes commercial catch is evenly distributed spatially across each reporting block.
Open Geospatial Consortium Web Coverage Service (WCS)
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GetCapabilities
http://geo.pacioos.hawaii.edu/geoserver/PACIOOS/hi_otp_all_fishing_com_line/ows?service=WCS&version=1.0.0&request=GetCapabilities
OGC:WCS
OGC-WCS
Open Geospatial Consortium Web Coverage Service (WCS). Supported WCS versions include 1.0.0, 1.1.0, and 1.1.1. Supported output formats include GeoTIFF, GIF, JPEG, PNG, or TIFF.
download
Commercial Line Fishing Estimated Average Annual Catch of Reef Fish, 2003-2013 - Hawaii
2017-04-18
creation
2017-04-18
issued
2017-04-18
revision
Carrie V. Kappel
National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)
kappel@nceas.ucsb.edu
http://oceantippingpoints.org/about-us/people#Carrie
http
web browser
information
principalInvestigator
Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS)
info@pacioos.org
http://pacioos.org
http
web browser
information
publisher
Nearshore fisheries in the Main Hawaiian Islands encompass a diverse group of fishers using a wide array of gears and targeting many different species. Communities in Hawaii often rely on these fisheries for economic, social, and cultural services. However, the stress from overfishing can cause ecosystem degradation and long-term economic loss. This layer represents the average annual commercial catch of reef fish by line fishing over the years 2003-2013 as reported in commercial catch data collected by the State of Hawaii Department of Aquatic Resources (DAR) Commercial Marine Landings Database (CML). "Line fishing" is a fairly broad category that can include casting, trolling, hand line, short line, and others. These gears were grouped together for consistency with non-commercial catch estimates from McCoy et al. (2018). Commercial catch is reported to DAR in large irregular reporting blocks by gear and by species.
This layer's spatial footprint aligns with the inshore commercial reporting blocks from the shapefile served on the Hawaii Statewide GIS Program website (Fishchart2008.shp) (http://planning.hawaii.gov/gis/download-gis-data/). Data are filtered by DAR before release such that reporting blocks with less than three fishers reporting are excluded in order to protect fisher identities. It is not possible to explicitly distinguish between boat-based and shore-based fishing based on the gear types reported in CML data. The Ocean Tipping Points (OTP) project filtered the data for line fishing and reef fish species only and calculated average annual catch in kilograms by reporting block to match with data from the Marine Recreational Information Program (MRIP). In marine protected areas (MPAs) where boat-based fishing is not allowed, catch was set to zero; and inside de facto MPAs with restricted access, catch was reduced according to expert input and local knowledge. Average annual commercial catch data were converted from polygon to raster and then divided by the number of 100-m raster cells within each reporting block so that units are comparable to non-commercial fishing layers (kg/ha). The result assumes commercial catch is evenly distributed spatially across each reporting block.
Open Geospatial Consortium Web Map Service (WMS)
1
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tight
GetCapabilities
http://geo.pacioos.hawaii.edu/geoserver/PACIOOS/hi_otp_all_fishing_com_line/ows?service=WMS&version=1.3.0&request=GetCapabilities
OGC:WMS
OGC-WMS
Open Geospatial Consortium Web Map Service (WMS). Supported WMS versions include 1.1.1 and 1.3.0. Supported map formats include AtomPub, GeoRSS, GeoTIFF, GIF, JPEG, KML/KMZ, PDF, PNG, SVG, and TIFF. Supported info formats include GeoJSON, GeoJSON-P, GML, HTML, and plain text.
download
Commercial Line Fishing Estimated Average Annual Catch of Reef Fish, 2003-2013 - Hawaii
2017-04-18
creation
2017-04-18
issued
2017-04-18
revision
Ocean Tipping Points (OTP)
http://oceantippingpoints.org
http
web browser
information
originator
Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS)
info@pacioos.org
http://pacioos.org
http
web browser
information
distributor
Nearshore fisheries in the Main Hawaiian Islands encompass a diverse group of fishers using a wide array of gears and targeting many different species. Communities in Hawaii often rely on these fisheries for economic, social, and cultural services. However, the stress from overfishing can cause ecosystem degradation and long-term economic loss. This layer represents the average annual commercial catch of reef fish by line fishing over the years 2003-2013 as reported in commercial catch data collected by the State of Hawaii Department of Aquatic Resources (DAR) Commercial Marine Landings Database (CML). "Line fishing" is a fairly broad category that can include casting, trolling, hand line, short line, and others. These gears were grouped together for consistency with non-commercial catch estimates from McCoy et al. (2018). Commercial catch is reported to DAR in large irregular reporting blocks by gear and by species.
This layer's spatial footprint aligns with the inshore commercial reporting blocks from the shapefile served on the Hawaii Statewide GIS Program website (Fishchart2008.shp) (http://planning.hawaii.gov/gis/download-gis-data/). Data are filtered by DAR before release such that reporting blocks with less than three fishers reporting are excluded in order to protect fisher identities. It is not possible to explicitly distinguish between boat-based and shore-based fishing based on the gear types reported in CML data. The Ocean Tipping Points (OTP) project filtered the data for line fishing and reef fish species only and calculated average annual catch in kilograms by reporting block to match with data from the Marine Recreational Information Program (MRIP). In marine protected areas (MPAs) where boat-based fishing is not allowed, catch was set to zero; and inside de facto MPAs with restricted access, catch was reduced according to expert input and local knowledge. Average annual commercial catch data were converted from polygon to raster and then divided by the number of 100-m raster cells within each reporting block so that units are comparable to non-commercial fishing layers (kg/ha). The result assumes commercial catch is evenly distributed spatially across each reporting block.
Open Geospatial Consortium Web Map Service - Cached (WMS-C)
1
-160.8274310364662
-154.24231813047925
18.50382548747189
22.589967639692087
tight
GetCapabilities
http://geo.pacioos.hawaii.edu/geoserver/PACIOOS/gwc/service/wms?service=WMS&version=1.1.1&request=GetCapabilities&tiled=true
OGC:WMS-C
OGC-WMS-C
Open Geospatial Consortium Web Map Service - Cached (WMS-C). Use of WMS-C is similar to traditional WMS but with the addition of the "tiled=true" parameter, which triggers GeoServer to pull map tiles from GeoWebCache if they have been previously generated. This can dramatically improve performance, especially for larger datasets. Supported map formats include JPEG and PNG. Supported info formats include GeoJSON, GML, HTML, and plain text.
download
Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System (PacIOOS)
info@pacioos.org
http://pacioos.org
http
web browser
information
publisher
http://geo.pacioos.hawaii.edu/geoserver/
http
GeoServer
This URL provides access to this dataset via GeoServer, including multiple output formats and an OpenLayers viewer.
download
http://geo.pacioos.hawaii.edu/geoexplorer/
http
GeoExplorer
This URL provides a viewer for this dataset.
download
http://pacioos.org/projects/oceantippingpoints/#data
http
PacIOOS Ocean Tipping Points (OTP) Data Viewer
This URL provides a viewer and/or data access for this dataset.
download
dataset
2017-04-18T00:00:00Z OGC web services (WMS and WFS) enabled by PacIOOS via GeoServer. Original data from source provider may have been reformatted, reprojected, or adjusted in other ways to optimize these capabilities.
This record was translated and enhanced from GeoServer OGC Web Services (OWS) using PacIOOS software.