The Canadian Human Footprint

Abstract: Efforts are underway in Canada to set aside terrestrial lands for conservation, thereby protecting them from anthropogenic pressures. Here we produce the first Canadian human footprint map by combining twelve different anthropogenic pressures and identify intact and modified lands and ecos...

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Main Authors: Hirsh-Pearson, Kristen, Johnson, Chris, Schuster, Richard, Wheate, Roger, Venter, Oscar
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Scholars Portal Dataverse 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5683/sp2/evkavl
https://dataverse.scholarsportal.info/citation?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP2/EVKAVL
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5683/sp2/evkavl 2023-05-15T15:06:42+02:00 The Canadian Human Footprint Hirsh-Pearson, Kristen Johnson, Chris Schuster, Richard Wheate, Roger Venter, Oscar 2022 https://dx.doi.org/10.5683/sp2/evkavl https://dataverse.scholarsportal.info/citation?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP2/EVKAVL unknown Scholars Portal Dataverse Dataset dataset 2022 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5683/sp2/evkavl 2022-04-01T16:05:20Z Abstract: Efforts are underway in Canada to set aside terrestrial lands for conservation, thereby protecting them from anthropogenic pressures. Here we produce the first Canadian human footprint map by combining twelve different anthropogenic pressures and identify intact and modified lands and ecosystems across the country. Our results showed strong spatial variation in pressures across the country, with just 18% of Canada experiencing measurable human pressure. However, some ecosystems are experiencing very high pressure, such as the Great Lakes Plains and Prairies national ecological areas which have over 75% and 56% of their areas, respectively, with a high human footprint. In contrast, the Arctic and Northern Mountains have less than 0.02% and 0.2% of their extent under high human footprint. A validation of the final map, using random statistical sampling, resulted in a Cohen Kappa statistic of 0.91, signifying an ‘almost perfect’ agreement between the human footprint and the validation data set. By increasing the number and accuracy of mapped pressures, our map demonstrates much more widespread pressures in Canada than were indicated by previous global mapping efforts, demonstrating the value in specific national data applications. Ecological areas with immense anthropogenic pressure, highlight challenges that may arise when planning for ecologically representative protected areas. Dataset Arctic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Canada
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
description Abstract: Efforts are underway in Canada to set aside terrestrial lands for conservation, thereby protecting them from anthropogenic pressures. Here we produce the first Canadian human footprint map by combining twelve different anthropogenic pressures and identify intact and modified lands and ecosystems across the country. Our results showed strong spatial variation in pressures across the country, with just 18% of Canada experiencing measurable human pressure. However, some ecosystems are experiencing very high pressure, such as the Great Lakes Plains and Prairies national ecological areas which have over 75% and 56% of their areas, respectively, with a high human footprint. In contrast, the Arctic and Northern Mountains have less than 0.02% and 0.2% of their extent under high human footprint. A validation of the final map, using random statistical sampling, resulted in a Cohen Kappa statistic of 0.91, signifying an ‘almost perfect’ agreement between the human footprint and the validation data set. By increasing the number and accuracy of mapped pressures, our map demonstrates much more widespread pressures in Canada than were indicated by previous global mapping efforts, demonstrating the value in specific national data applications. Ecological areas with immense anthropogenic pressure, highlight challenges that may arise when planning for ecologically representative protected areas.
format Dataset
author Hirsh-Pearson, Kristen
Johnson, Chris
Schuster, Richard
Wheate, Roger
Venter, Oscar
spellingShingle Hirsh-Pearson, Kristen
Johnson, Chris
Schuster, Richard
Wheate, Roger
Venter, Oscar
The Canadian Human Footprint
author_facet Hirsh-Pearson, Kristen
Johnson, Chris
Schuster, Richard
Wheate, Roger
Venter, Oscar
author_sort Hirsh-Pearson, Kristen
title The Canadian Human Footprint
title_short The Canadian Human Footprint
title_full The Canadian Human Footprint
title_fullStr The Canadian Human Footprint
title_full_unstemmed The Canadian Human Footprint
title_sort canadian human footprint
publisher Scholars Portal Dataverse
publishDate 2022
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5683/sp2/evkavl
https://dataverse.scholarsportal.info/citation?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP2/EVKAVL
geographic Arctic
Canada
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5683/sp2/evkavl
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