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Layer: IFR."DB-IFR".scdrs_ogl_fish_access_v2_wm (ID: 0)

Name: IFR."DB-IFR".scdrs_ogl_fish_access_v2_wm

Display Field: arc_calculations_csv_AHPID

Type: Feature Layer

Geometry Type: esriGeometryPolyline

Description: Tributary habitat is important to the life cycle of fishes (e.g., spawning), especially long, unimpeded lengths of tributaries. This data layers displays the estimated tributary reaches accessible from the Great Lakes shoreline to the first major dam or barrier allowing fish access. The tributary segements included in this data layer were obtained from the National Hydrography Dataset (NHD) Plus version 2 and the Ontario Integrated Hydrology Dataset (OIHD) version 1.0 (2012). The dams and barriers identified and snapped to the tributaries were the National Anthropogenic Barrier Dataset (2013) in the U.S. and the Ontario Dam Inventory (2014). Using the methods developed by A. Cooper and explained in Cooper (2013) and Cooper et al. (2016) all lengths of tributary between the most downstream dam and the Great Lakes shoreline was identified.This dataset was altered to limit its extent to the St. Clair Detroit River System (SCDRS) Initiative Project Area (https://scdrs.org/), which includes the waters of SCDRS as defined by the SCDRS Initiative Project and their contributing watersheds. The SCDRS Initiative defines the waters of SCDRS the area approximately from the southern base of Lake Huron to the western basin of Lake Erie.

Service Item Id: f1205835b1f64379913526fec3fe700b

Copyright Text: 1) National Anthropogenic Barrier Dataset (NABD) 2013, USGS: http://nepanode.anl.gov/layers/geonode:nabd_fish_barriers_2012; 2) Ontario Dam Inventory (2014), Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources an Forestry: https://www.javacoeapp.lrc.gov.on.ca/geonetwork/srv/en/main.home?uuid=9a57609e-0047-4c3b-9100-c78a7d4cf614; 3) Cooper, A. R. 2013. Effects of dams on streams of the conterminous United States: characterizing patterns in habitat fragmentation nationally and fluvial fish response in the Midwest. Master’s thesis, Michigan State University; 4) Cooper, A. R., D. M. Infante, K. Wehrly, L. Wang, and T. Brendan. 2016. Understanding large-scale dam influences on fishes: Identifying indicators and quantifying effects. Ecological Indicators 61:646-657; 5) The Great Lakes Aquatic Habitat Framework (GLAHF) project has been funded by the Great Lakes Fishery Trust and led by Dr. Catherine Riseng, PI, at the University of Michigan School of Natural Resources and Environment, with partners from Michigan Department of Natural Resources-Institute for Fisheries Research, NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, International Joint Commission, Michigan State University, The Nature Conservancy, Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, University of Minnesota-Duluth, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, U.S. Geological Survey and many collaborating partners in both the USA and Canada. More information about this project can be found at http://glahf.org/; 6) This SCDRS work was done as part of a Great Lakes Restoration Initiative (GLRI) grant awarded to the Office of the Great Lakes (OGL) that provided capacity funding to the Great Lakes Aquatic Habitat Framework (GLAHF) project to provide and support the platform and spatial infrastructure for planning and implementing the SCDRS Initiative softening shoreline and coastal wetland habitat restoration projects.

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