• CAFF - Arctic Biodiversity Data Service (ABDS)
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EBSA (Ecological and Biological Significance Areas) in the Arctic Marine Environment

Human activity is expanding in the Arctic marine environment, in part due to warming ocean temperatures and the dramatic loss of summer sea ice. New and expanding human uses include fishing, shipping and offshore oil and gas development. All have the potential to place major additional stress on ocean ecosystems which are already undergoing profound change related to warming, sea ice loss, and alterations in ocean chemistry.

Because activities conducted in one nation's waters can affect other parts of the region, effective management of some human uses in the Arctic marine environment will require international cooperation. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, in conjunction with other international agreements and national laws and regulations, provides a general legal foundation. However, new rules may be necessary to protect the Arctic marine environment. Examples of possible areas of international cooperation include: development of new standards for Arctic marine shipping, regulation of new or expanding Arctic fisheries, rules to protect the environment in the course of natural resource development, stricter regulation of Arctic tourism, mechanisms to assess and manage the cumulative impacts of multiple activities affecting the same ecosystems, and procedures for the establishment of representative networks of protected marine areas.

Ecosystem-based management has the potential to provide an organizing framework for these new or enhanced management measures in the Arctic. Such an approach, as generally accepted at the international level, includes defining portions of ocean space for management purposes based on oceanographic and ecological criteria, and the development of management arrangements that address all human uses of that space in an integrated fashion. A central element of ecosystem-based management is the identification of ecologically significant or vulnerable areas that should be considered for protection due to their role in maintaining valued ecosystem functions and resilience.

This data was created with the purpose to identify these areas within the Arctic marine environment.

Simple

Date (Revision)
2016-01-25
Edition
http://localhost:8080/demodem/editioin
Status
Completed
Owner
  Ecologic Institute and the Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation (CMBC) at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego - ( )
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed
Theme
  • stressors
  • marine
  • protected areas
  • shipping
  • fishing
Place
  • ecosystem
Access constraints
Copyright
Use constraints
otherRestictions
Spatial representation type
Vector
Metadata language
English
Character set
UTF8
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Reference system identifier
EPSG / North_Pole_Stereographic (EPSG:102018) /
Protocol
WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link
Protocol
OGC:WMS-1.1.1-http-get-map
OnLine resource
9.tif ( WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download )

Image

OnLine resource
EBSA_0511_JC_area_sort.zip ( WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download )

Shapefile

Hierarchy level
Dataset

Conformance result

Date (Publication)
Pass
File identifier
06bcf22f-fcf5-4f56-b104-23888968f7e0 XML
Metadata language
English
Character set
UTF8
Date stamp
2023-02-13T13:59:23
Metadata standard name
ISO 19115:2003/19139
Metadata standard version
1.0
Point of contact
  CAFF - ( )
 
 

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Keywords

fishing marine protected areas shipping stressors

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