EUSeaMap. A European broad-scale seabed habitat map

In order to most benefit from the potential offered by the European marine basins in terms of growth and employment (Blue Growth), and to protect the marine environment, we need to know more about the seafloor. European Directives, such as the MSFD, but also the Horizon 2020 roadmap explicitly calle...

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Main Authors: Populus, Jacques, Vasquez, Mickael, Albrecht, James, Manca, Eleonora, Agnesi, Sabrina, Al Hamdani, Zyad, Andersen, Jesper, Annunziatellis, Aldo, Bekkby, Trine, Bruschi, Antonello, Doncheva, Valentina, Drakopoulou, Vivi, Duncan, Graeme, Inghilesi, Roberto, Kyriakidou, Chara, Lalli, Francesco, Lillis, Helen, Mo, Giulia, Muresan, Mihaela, Salomidi, Maria, Sakellariou, Dimitris, Simboura, Mika, Teaca, Adrian, Tezcan, Devrim, Todorova, Valentina, Tunesi, Leonardo
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Ifremer 2017
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.13155/49975
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00388/49975/
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spelling ftdatacite:10.13155/49975 2023-05-15T15:39:13+02:00 EUSeaMap. A European broad-scale seabed habitat map Populus, Jacques Vasquez, Mickael Albrecht, James Manca, Eleonora Agnesi, Sabrina Al Hamdani, Zyad Andersen, Jesper Annunziatellis, Aldo Bekkby, Trine Bruschi, Antonello Doncheva, Valentina Drakopoulou, Vivi Duncan, Graeme Inghilesi, Roberto Kyriakidou, Chara Lalli, Francesco Lillis, Helen Mo, Giulia Muresan, Mihaela Salomidi, Maria Sakellariou, Dimitris Simboura, Mika Teaca, Adrian Tezcan, Devrim Todorova, Valentina Tunesi, Leonardo 2017 pdf https://dx.doi.org/10.13155/49975 https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00388/49975/ unknown Ifremer Monograph Text book Book 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.13155/49975 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z In order to most benefit from the potential offered by the European marine basins in terms of growth and employment (Blue Growth), and to protect the marine environment, we need to know more about the seafloor. European Directives, such as the MSFD, but also the Horizon 2020 roadmap explicitly called for a multi-resolution full coverage of all European seas including bathymetry, geology and habitats. The present work, following on a suite of past initiatives, has made a big step forward in this direction. It has first boosted the collation of existing maps from surveys by setting up a framework and a procedure to encourage people to submit their maps and data. This resulted in a more attractive EMODnet seabed habitat portal and a snowball effect with more and more people willing to join. However, collation will eventually come to an end and as new creations of seabed habitat maps are so complex and time-consuming, a cost-efficient way to meet the need for a full-coverage habitat map was found to be low-resolution maps and models to predict seafloor habitat types. The broad-scale map referred to as EUSeaMap has been created by this project and after the first two phases it now covers all European basins from the Barents Sea to Macaronesia and to the Black Sea. By harmonising mapping procedures - based on the EUNIS classification - and fostering a common understanding among seabed mappers in Europe, EUSeaMap provides today the community with a comprehensive, free and ready-to-use map that can find applications at regional scale for management and conservation issues. Tables and maps for all basins can be found in section 3 “Results and disciussions”. The project has played a key role in giving feedback to other EMODnet communities dealing with bathymetry, geology and biology, all essential data sources for the broad-scale map. It has also improved the understanding of the EUNIS habitat classification - with a focus on the Adriatic and the Black Sea - by better specifying transitions between classes based on benthic ground-truth data. It has fostered the development of oceanographic variables such as light, waves and currents that have a strong bearing on habitats. Finally it has also been instrumental in developing map confidence assessment methods that account for the broad spatial variation in data sources quality and for uncertain boundaries between habitat classes. The EUSeaMap methods are repeatable and ensure that the predictive maps can continue to be improved in the future, as a result either of EUNIS enhancements or increase in resolution. From today’s 250m resolution it is likely that new deliveries of enhanced source layers due to steady progress in oceanography and geophysics will enable constant refinement of the maps over time. Text Barents Sea DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Barents Sea
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
description In order to most benefit from the potential offered by the European marine basins in terms of growth and employment (Blue Growth), and to protect the marine environment, we need to know more about the seafloor. European Directives, such as the MSFD, but also the Horizon 2020 roadmap explicitly called for a multi-resolution full coverage of all European seas including bathymetry, geology and habitats. The present work, following on a suite of past initiatives, has made a big step forward in this direction. It has first boosted the collation of existing maps from surveys by setting up a framework and a procedure to encourage people to submit their maps and data. This resulted in a more attractive EMODnet seabed habitat portal and a snowball effect with more and more people willing to join. However, collation will eventually come to an end and as new creations of seabed habitat maps are so complex and time-consuming, a cost-efficient way to meet the need for a full-coverage habitat map was found to be low-resolution maps and models to predict seafloor habitat types. The broad-scale map referred to as EUSeaMap has been created by this project and after the first two phases it now covers all European basins from the Barents Sea to Macaronesia and to the Black Sea. By harmonising mapping procedures - based on the EUNIS classification - and fostering a common understanding among seabed mappers in Europe, EUSeaMap provides today the community with a comprehensive, free and ready-to-use map that can find applications at regional scale for management and conservation issues. Tables and maps for all basins can be found in section 3 “Results and disciussions”. The project has played a key role in giving feedback to other EMODnet communities dealing with bathymetry, geology and biology, all essential data sources for the broad-scale map. It has also improved the understanding of the EUNIS habitat classification - with a focus on the Adriatic and the Black Sea - by better specifying transitions between classes based on benthic ground-truth data. It has fostered the development of oceanographic variables such as light, waves and currents that have a strong bearing on habitats. Finally it has also been instrumental in developing map confidence assessment methods that account for the broad spatial variation in data sources quality and for uncertain boundaries between habitat classes. The EUSeaMap methods are repeatable and ensure that the predictive maps can continue to be improved in the future, as a result either of EUNIS enhancements or increase in resolution. From today’s 250m resolution it is likely that new deliveries of enhanced source layers due to steady progress in oceanography and geophysics will enable constant refinement of the maps over time.
format Text
author Populus, Jacques
Vasquez, Mickael
Albrecht, James
Manca, Eleonora
Agnesi, Sabrina
Al Hamdani, Zyad
Andersen, Jesper
Annunziatellis, Aldo
Bekkby, Trine
Bruschi, Antonello
Doncheva, Valentina
Drakopoulou, Vivi
Duncan, Graeme
Inghilesi, Roberto
Kyriakidou, Chara
Lalli, Francesco
Lillis, Helen
Mo, Giulia
Muresan, Mihaela
Salomidi, Maria
Sakellariou, Dimitris
Simboura, Mika
Teaca, Adrian
Tezcan, Devrim
Todorova, Valentina
Tunesi, Leonardo
spellingShingle Populus, Jacques
Vasquez, Mickael
Albrecht, James
Manca, Eleonora
Agnesi, Sabrina
Al Hamdani, Zyad
Andersen, Jesper
Annunziatellis, Aldo
Bekkby, Trine
Bruschi, Antonello
Doncheva, Valentina
Drakopoulou, Vivi
Duncan, Graeme
Inghilesi, Roberto
Kyriakidou, Chara
Lalli, Francesco
Lillis, Helen
Mo, Giulia
Muresan, Mihaela
Salomidi, Maria
Sakellariou, Dimitris
Simboura, Mika
Teaca, Adrian
Tezcan, Devrim
Todorova, Valentina
Tunesi, Leonardo
EUSeaMap. A European broad-scale seabed habitat map
author_facet Populus, Jacques
Vasquez, Mickael
Albrecht, James
Manca, Eleonora
Agnesi, Sabrina
Al Hamdani, Zyad
Andersen, Jesper
Annunziatellis, Aldo
Bekkby, Trine
Bruschi, Antonello
Doncheva, Valentina
Drakopoulou, Vivi
Duncan, Graeme
Inghilesi, Roberto
Kyriakidou, Chara
Lalli, Francesco
Lillis, Helen
Mo, Giulia
Muresan, Mihaela
Salomidi, Maria
Sakellariou, Dimitris
Simboura, Mika
Teaca, Adrian
Tezcan, Devrim
Todorova, Valentina
Tunesi, Leonardo
author_sort Populus, Jacques
title EUSeaMap. A European broad-scale seabed habitat map
title_short EUSeaMap. A European broad-scale seabed habitat map
title_full EUSeaMap. A European broad-scale seabed habitat map
title_fullStr EUSeaMap. A European broad-scale seabed habitat map
title_full_unstemmed EUSeaMap. A European broad-scale seabed habitat map
title_sort euseamap. a european broad-scale seabed habitat map
publisher Ifremer
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.13155/49975
https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00388/49975/
geographic Barents Sea
geographic_facet Barents Sea
genre Barents Sea
genre_facet Barents Sea
op_doi https://doi.org/10.13155/49975
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