Large Remaining Unfragmented Forest Areas in Canada
Entry ID:
Ca_fblic_GFW
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Summary
Abstract:
This raster layer consists of the "large remaining forest areas" grid published in Canada's Forests at a Crossroads: An Assessment in the Year 2000. This dataset is derived from the CCRS Land Cover of Canada (1995) and describes accessed and unaccessed forest lands, land converted to urban uses, and non-forest areas. This analysis is based on a national ... transportation dataset at 1: 250,000, Accessed / Unaccessed Forests A. LABEL / CATEGORY DEFINITIONS 1. ACCESSED LANDS: Lands that are within one kilometer of a known access corridor. Access corridors include roads, trails, railways, pipelines (oil/gas), hydroelectric and telephone transmission lines, seismic lines, and known motorized backcountry routes (e.g. ski-doo trails). 2. LAND COVER OF CANADA (Unaccessed): Lands that are further than one kilometer from a known access corridor. Subclasses are defined according to the Canadian Center for Remote Sensing 1995 Land Cover of Canada (LC95) classes as follows: - Southern Boreal and Other Forests: All forest classes, excluding "Northern Forest" (boreal) medium and low-density evergreen needleleaf forest, plus "Burns" classes. (LC95 classes 1-2,4,6-12) - Northern Boreal Forest: "Northern Forest" (boreal) medium and low-density evergreen needleleaf forest classes. (LC95 classes 3,5) - Open Land (Wetland/Shrubland): All "Open Land" (tree crown density of less than 10%) classes. (LC95 classes 13,14,15) - Grassland: LC95 class 16. - Barren Land: All "Barren Land" classes. (LC95 classes 17-22) - Snow/Ice: LC95 class 31. - Freshwater: LC95 class 30. B. METHODOLOGY / TECHNICAL NOTES GENERAL METHODOLOGY 1. Access corridors include linear vector or raster data for transportation (roads, trails, railways, abandoned railways), utilities (oil/gas, hydro, telephone), and exploration (seismic lines) themes. 2. Access data (transportation and utility corridors) was obtained by province/territory from federal, provincial and territorial governments at the highest obtainable quality (resolution, currency and completeness) within the SOF project budget. These factors (content, quality and cost) vary considerably between provincial/federal agencies themselves, such that input datasets differ in their scale, currency, coverage, features and feature attributes. (See Data Sources for more details). 3. The analysis resolution was set to 1 km 2 to match the CCRS 1995 Land Cover of Canada (LC95) data that is used as a base layer for land and forest cover in Canada. This resolution also corresponds to the lowest resolution found in the input access datasets. 4. Lambert Conformal Conic, NAD27, was used as the standard SOF projection for analysis and presentation. This was found to be the most common data projection for federal agency national datasets, although no official standard exists. 5. Due to the variability of data features and feature attributes across Canada (e.g. seismic line data obtained only for Alberta and Northeast BC; winter roads found only in certain datasets, etc.), no attempt was made to differentiate between the different types of access corridors. The impact extent for all linear corridors was modeled as 1 km in width. 6. Input vector data was rasterized using a 1 km resolution grid relative to the origin of the LC95 data. Grid output cells (1 km2) were classified as accessed if any input corridor feature was present within a cell. 7. Input raster data was first buffered at its original resolution to a width of 1 km before resampling (nearest neighbor) to 1km resolution. This resulted in minimal loss of combined access features (foreground cells) by area during the resample procedure. This method was verified against the vector rasterization process using Yukon vector data (250m resolution). The two methods differed in total access area by less than 0.1%. 8. A resulting access corridor grid was produced for each province/territory. Provincial data was trimmed to exclude any data that was not under its respective jurisdiction, and then merged to produce a national access corridor grid. 9. The national access corridor grid was merged with the LC95 land cover data. Any LC95 cell (excluding water) that corresponded to an access grid cell was reclassed as accessed. In addition, all LC95 Developed classes (cropland, cropland/woodland, woodland/cropland, cropland/other, and urban classes - 23 to 29) were reclassed as accessed. This assumes that these classes would be accessible by nature of being developed in whole or in part. 10. Finally, the resulting accessed/unaccessed land cover grid was merged with a national 1:1,000,000 populated places dataset to ensure that small northern communities that are fly-in only were considered within the analysis. DISCUSSION present analysis likely underestimates accessed land (define as within 1 km of an access corridor) in Canada due to: - relatively old provincial inventories for transportation themes (estimated average age of data of 10 - 20 years); - missing data (e.g. seismic line data for the Northwest Territories and Saskatchewan); - coarse scale of certain input datasets (e.g. Newfoundland 1:1,000,000 scale). Certain provinces were analyzed using different methods than described above due to the nature of available data. This includes: - British Columbia (BC): Due to the exorbitant cost of provincial access data (approx. $4,000,000 for 1:20,000 TRIM roads data), and the availability of an existing 1989 BC Ministry of Forests Recreation Opportunity Spectrum (ROS) roadless area analysis, accessed land was determined using ROS roaded class. The ROS roaded class corresponds to lands within 1 kilometer of transportation features. - Quebec (QC): Recent high-resolution digital data was either not available, or cost-prohibitive, for use in this analysis. However, 1994 satellite imagery (125m resolution) was obtained and used as a proxy indicator for access in Quebec. The image data (.tiff format) was imported into ERDAS IMAGINE software as a RGB file. 50 initial classes were reduced to water, forest, burns, and non-forest areas using an unsupervised classification. Non-forest areas include urban, rural, recently cut, and regenerating forest land. Non-forest land within tenured forest management areas were reclassified as accessed land. This assumes that such lands, including harvested forests, are within 1 km of an access corridor used to develop or log these areas. - Alberta (AB) and Northeast BC: These areas were analyzed for linear disturbance density using 1:20,000 to 1:50,000 input data (See Alberta case study). Lands with densities greater than zero were reclassified as accessed. As the original road density analysis was conducted using an approximate buffer of 600 meters, the AB/NEBC access data includes some lands that are up to 1.2 km from an access corridor. Therefore, the extent of accessed lands is slightly overestimated in AB and NEBC. The high proportion of accessed lands in AB and NEBC is related to the extremely high density of oil and gas seismic lines within these areas. (See Alberta case study). The sharp distinction between accessed land in Alberta and certain unaccessed land along the AB/Saskatchewan (SK) and AB/NEBC/North West Territories (NWT) borders reflects the lack of seismic line data for both SK and NWT. Accessed lands within Newfoundland are likely greatly underestimated due to limited input data (1:1,000,000 scale). C. SOURCE DATA THEME 1: ACCESSED LANDS Unless otherwise stated, data processing followed the general methodology described above. Newfoundland VMAP0_R4 (Digital Chart of the World) transportation and utility vector data PROVIDER: Geogratis, Geomatics Canada Canadian Center for Remote Sensing, NRCAN Average 1990. SCALE: 1:1,000,000. PROCESSING: See general methodology Nova Scotia DATA: 1:50,000 roads, railways and utilities database. PROVIDER: Scotia Geomatics Center to early 90s. Highways more recently updated than secondary roads. SCALE: 1:50,000 PROCESSING: See general methodology New Brunswick DATA: Digital Topographic Database of New Brunswick. PROVIDER: New Brunswick SCALE: 1:10,000 PROCESSING: See general methodology Quebec "Le Quebec forestier meridional" (LANDSAT satellite image composite of Quebec commercial forest zone). PROVIDER: Direction de la gestion des stocks forestiers Ministere des Ressources naturelles du Quebec SCALE: 125 meter resolution PROCESSING: See Discussion notes. - Non-forest lands may be overestimated in northern portions of the Quebec commercial forest zone due to higher level of bog land cover during classification. NAME: VMAP0_R4 (Digital Chart of the World) transportation and utility vector data PROVIDER: See above. Ontario Raster summary grid file of access corridors. Original source data includes: - Ontario Base Map 1:20,000 roads, railway, and transmission line data; - Ontario logging roads from Landsat imagery; - Ontario roads from the Digital Topographic Database 1:600,000 scale; - Ontario Provincial Snowmobile Trails. PROVIDER: Ministry of Natural Resources. SOURCE DATE: Variable - estimated between mid-80s to mid-90s. SCALE: 200m resolution raster grid PROCESSING: Projected to SOF LCC - 200m data buffered to 1km access corridor. - Resampled to 1km resolution. - Reclassed to single access class. Manitoba Manitoba Road Network (from Forest Resources Inventory data) roads data. PROVIDER: Natural Resources, Forestry Branch SOURCE DATE: Quoted average age "10-20 years old". SCALE: 1:20,000 PROCESSING: See general methodology Notes: Limited metadata provided, therefore there was no ability to verify data content. - The Manitoba road network consists of the provincial trunk highways and municipalities roads. This network does not include all roads constructed by the forestry and mining sectors or all the winter roads used to access some of the northern communities. NAME: VMAP0_R4 (Digital Chart of the World) railway and utility vector data See above. Saskatchewan Saskatchewan Road Network road and railway data (forested region only) PROVIDER: Saskatchewan Property Management Corporation SCALE: 1:20,000 PROCESSING: See general methodology Notes: No oil/gas seismic data. NAME: VMAP0_R4 (Digital Chart of the World) transportation and utility vector data (grassland region) See above. Alberta Alberta Case Study (forested region only) NAME: VMAP0_R4 (Digital Chart of the World) transportation and utility vector data (Alberta grassland region) See above. British Columbia DATA: Recreation Opportunity Spectrum PROVIDER: data from BC Ministry of Forests, Recreation Branch. ARC/INFO data obtained from Earthlife Canada Foundation Vancouver, BC CREATION DATE: 1989 SCALE: 1:2,000,000 PROCESSING: Roaded land reselected from ROS data. Rasterized at 1km2, reclassed, and projected to SOF LCC. Notes: Original data rubber-sheeted to BC coastline, with resulting inaccuracies. Northeast BC was analyzed using Alberta methodology. See Alberta case study. DATA: 1:1m VMAP transportation (Northwest BC only) and utility data. See above. Yukon Territory DATA: 1:250,000 topographic data (includes roads, trails, seismic lines and utility lines). PROVIDER: Government, Department of Renewable Resources SOURCE DATE: Variable. Original data 1970-1990. Partially updated 1995. SCALE: 1:250,000 PROCESSING: See general methodology Notes: Data extends into portions of Northwest Territories. Northwest Territories DATA: VMAP0_R4 (Digital Chart of the World) transportation and utility vector data See above. Notes: Missing oil/gas data. - VMAP0_R4 data confirmed with Ministry of Tourism road map. Nunavut VMAP0_R4 (Digital Chart of the World) transportation and utility vector data See above. National Data DATA: VMAP0_R4 (Digital Chart of the World) populated places point data. See above. THEME 2: LAND COVER OF CANADA (Unaccessed) DATA: Land Cover of Canada Version 1.1 raster data PROVIDER: Center for Remote Sensing (CCRS), EMS Section. SCALE: 1 km raster grid PROCESSING: Projected to SOF Lambers Conformal Conic standard projection, NAD 27.
Related URL
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Description:
Canada Interactive GIS map using data from the Global Forest Watch.
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Geographic Coverage
(Click for Interactive Map)
Spatial coordinates
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N: 67.05
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S: 41.4
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E: -63.07
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W: -135.18
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Data Set Citation
Dataset Originator/Creator:
World Resources Institute
Dataset Title:
Large Remaining Unfragmented Forest Areas
Dataset Release Date:
2001-10-26
Dataset Release Place:
Washington, D.C.
Dataset Publisher:
World Resources Institute
Data Presentation Form:
map coverage
Online Resource:
http://www.globalforestwatch.org/english/datawarehouse/index.asp
Temporal Coverage
Start Date:
2001-01-01
Stop Date:
2001-12-31
Quality
GFW and its collaborators have collected data from sources believed to be reliable. Furthermore, all GFW data has undergone a formalized review process. GFW and its collaborators provide the data "as is" and do not guarantee the accuracy of the data. The data is provided without warranties expressed or implied and GFW and its ... collaborators do not accept responsibility for errors or omission in the data or in the documentation accompanying the data. GFW and its collaborators are not responsible for any consequence of the use of the data by any organization or individual. The boundaries, colors, denominations and other information shown in any map or data set on the GFW WebPage do not imply on the part of GFW and its collaborators any judgment on the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. 
Access Constraints
none
Use Constraints
These data are copyrighted by WRI on behalf of GFW and its collaborators. Use and reproduction of these data is authorized for educational or other non-commercial purposes without prior permission from the copyright holders. Also, we encourage news media to reproduce the information and maps, as long as GFW is acknowledged as ... the source. You may make as many copies of the data as you wish; give exact copies of the original data to anyone; and distribute the data in its unmodified form via electronic means. There is no charge for any of the above. You are specifically prohibited from charging, or requesting donations, for any such copies, however made; and from distributing the data with other products (commercial or otherwise) without prior written permission. 
Data Set Progress
COMPLETE
Personnel
Role:
INVESTIGATOR
Phone:
+64 3 479 7654
Fax:
+64 3 479 7584
Email:
adelie at stonebow.otago.ac.nz
Contact Address:
Zoology Department
Center for Science Communication
University of Otago
PO BOX 56
City:
Dunedin
Country:
New Zealand
Role:
INVESTIGATOR
Role:
DIF AUTHOR
Phone:
+64 3 358 0200
Fax:
+64 3 358 0211
Email:
c.poirot at antarcticanz.govt.nz
Contact Address:
Antarctica New Zealand
Private Bag 4745
City:
Christchurch
Country:
New Zealand
Role:
DIF AUTHOR
Phone:
+64 3 358 0200
Fax:
+64 3 358 0211
Email:
s.gordon at antarcticanz.govt.nz
Contact Address:
Antarctica New Zealand
Private Bag 4745
City:
Christchurch
Country:
New Zealand
Publications/References
Davis, L.S. Hunter, F.M. Harcourt, R.G. Heath, S.M. Reciprocal homosexual mounting in Adélie Penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae). Emu 98(Part 2): 136-137, 1998. Hunter, F.M. Miller, G.D. Davis, L.S. Mate switching and copulation behaviour in the Adélie penguin. Behaviour 132(9-10): 691-707, 1995.
Hunter, F.M. Davis, L.S. Miller, G.D. Sperm transfer in the Adélie penguin. Condor 98(2): 410-413, 1996.
Hunter, F.M. Davis, L.S. Female Adélie penguins acquire nest material from extrapair males after engaging in extrapair copulations. Auk 115(2): 526-528, 1998.
Hunter, F.M. Harcourt, R. Wright, M. Davis, L.S. Strategic allocation of ejaculates by male Adélie penguins. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B(267): 1541-1545, 2000.
Creation and Review Dates
DIF Creation Date:
2008-10-13
Last DIF Revision Date:
2008-10-14
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