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Spatial representation of DOC's land management units defined by various acts of parliament and legislation. The attributes in this dataset are derived from the National Property and Land Information System (NaPALIS), which is a centralised database for all Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) and Department of Conservation (DOC) administered land. Public Conservation Land (abbreviated to PCL) parcels are defined geographically, recognised, dedicated and managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long term conservation of nature with associated ecosystem services and cultural values.New Zealand's Public Conservation Land is managed under four main laws.Conservation Act 1987National Parks Act 1980Reserves Act 1977Wildlife Act 1953These manifest in numerous different types of protected area, the most important of which are:National ParksConservation ParksNature ReservesScientific ReservesScenic ReservesRecreation (and other) ReservesN.B. Combining Public Conservation Land, with Marine Reserves and Sanctuaries to Protect Marine Mammals is collectively known as Public Conservation Areas (PCA).*****LICENCE*****This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.*****DISCLAIMER***** 1. DOC makes no express or implied warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of the data or information, nor its suitability for any purpose. Errors are inevitably part of any database, and can arise by a number of means, from errors during field data collection, to errors during data entry. 2. DOC makes no warranties or representations as to possible infringement upon copyrights or other intellectual property rights of others in the data or information. 3. DOC will not accept liability for any direct, indirect, special or consequential damages, losses or expenses howsoever arising and relating to use, or lack of use, of the data or information supplied.*****GUIDELINES FOR THE USE OF THE INFORMATION***** 4. Care should be taken in deriving conclusions from any data or information supplied. 5. Any use of the data or information supplied should state when the data or information was acquired and that it may now be out-of-date.*****COPYRIGHT OBLIGATIONS***** 6. All proprietary rights to the intellectual property in the data or information remain with the Crown as its sole property. 7. Modification of the data and information or the addition of the information does not confer copyright or any other form of property of the original material to a user. 8. All maps or reports that are derived from the data or information must acknowledge the Crown copyright, in the following way: Crown Copyright: Department of Conservation Te Papa Atawhai [year]. 9. This information resource may be passed onto another party, in either hard copy or electronic form. If a user does this, then it is recommended that they also supply this metadata record with the information resource.
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Department of Conservation (DOC) - Recreation track lines (approx. centreline). Dataset shows tracks managed for walking and tramping.
If you intend to walk a track, please confirm with your local office or the DOC website that the track isn't under a temporary or more permanent closure before embarking.
Refreshed weekly and reflects the content on the website.*****LICENCE*****This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.*****DISCLAIMER***** 1. DOC makes no express or implied warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of the data or information, nor its suitability for any purpose. Errors are inevitably part of any database, and can arise by a number of means, from errors during field data collection, to errors during data entry. 2. DOC makes no warranties or representations as to possible infringement upon copyrights or other intellectual property rights of others in the data or information. 3. DOC will not accept liability for any direct, indirect, special or consequential damages, losses or expenses howsoever arising and relating to use, or lack of use, of the data or information supplied.*****GUIDELINES FOR THE USE OF THE INFORMATION***** 4. Care should be taken in deriving conclusions from any data or information supplied. 5. Any use of the data or information supplied should state when the data or information was acquired and that it may now be out-of-date.*****COPYRIGHT OBLIGATIONS***** 6. All proprietary rights to the intellectual property in the data or information remain with the Crown as its sole property. 7. Modification of the data and information or the addition of the information does not confer copyright or any other form of property of the original material to a user. 8. All maps or reports that are derived from the data or information must acknowledge the Crown copyright, in the following way: Crown Copyright: Department of Conservation Te Papa Atawhai [year]. 9. This information resource may be passed onto another party, in either hard copy or electronic form. If a user does this, then it is recommended that they also supply this metadata record with the information resource.
Department of Conservation (DOC) - Campsites. Dataset shows all campsites.
If you intend to stay in a campsite, please confirm with your local office or the DOC website that it is available and not under a temporary or more permanent closure before departing.
Please note some campsites require advance booking, contact your local office or visit the DOC Website for more information.
Refreshed weekly and reflects the content on the website.*****LICENCE*****This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.*****DISCLAIMER***** 1. DOC makes no express or implied warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of the data or information, nor its suitability for any purpose. Errors are inevitably part of any database, and can arise by a number of means, from errors during field data collection, to errors during data entry. 2. DOC makes no warranties or representations as to possible infringement upon copyrights or other intellectual property rights of others in the data or information. 3. DOC will not accept liability for any direct, indirect, special or consequential damages, losses or expenses howsoever arising and relating to use, or lack of use, of the data or information supplied.*****GUIDELINES FOR THE USE OF THE INFORMATION***** 4. Care should be taken in deriving conclusions from any data or information supplied. 5. Any use of the data or information supplied should state when the data or information was acquired and that it may now be out-of-date.*****COPYRIGHT OBLIGATIONS***** 6. All proprietary rights to the intellectual property in the data or information remain with the Crown as its sole property. 7. Modification of the data and information or the addition of the information does not confer copyright or any other form of property of the original material to a user. 8. All maps or reports that are derived from the data or information must acknowledge the Crown copyright, in the following way: Crown Copyright: Department of Conservation Te Papa Atawhai [year]. 9. This information resource may be passed onto another party, in either hard copy or electronic form. If a user does this, then it is recommended that they also supply this metadata record with the information resource
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These boundaries represent the current DOC structure. The boundaries replace the existing Services District boundaries which were in place from 2 September 2013.
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This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 New Zealand License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/nz/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.
*****DISCLAIMER*****
*****GUIDELINES FOR THE USE OF THE INFORMATION*****
*****COPYRIGHT OBLIGATIONS*****
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Marine Reserve's are the government's most comprehensive tool in the provision of area-based biodiversity protection in the marine environment. Marine reserves are specified areas of the sea and foreshore that are managed to preserve themin their natural state as the habitat of marine life for scientific study.Marine reserves may be established in areas that contain underwater scenery, natural features, or marine life of such distinctive quality, or so typical, beautiful or unique that their continued preservation is in the national interest. Under the Marine Reserves Act 1971, the Department of Conservation is responsible for caring for and managing marine reserves. Management functions include marking marine reserve boundaries, law enforcement, issuing scientific permits and monitoring environmental changes.Further information about any particular Marine Reserve with associated map and bounding co-ordinates can be found at: https://www.doc.govt.nz/nature/habitats/marine/marine-reserves-a-z/*****LICENCE*****This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, MountainView, California, 94041, USA. *****DISCLAIMER*****1. DOC makes no express or implied warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of the data or information, nor its suitability for any purpose. Errors are inevitably part of any database, and can arise by a number of means, from errors during field data collection, to errors during data entry. 2. DOC makes no warranties or representations as to possible infringement upon copyrights or other intellectual property rights of others in the data or information. 3. DOC will not accept liability for any direct, indirect, special or consequential damages, losses or expenses howsoever arising and relating to use, or lack of use, of the data or information supplied. *****GUIDELINES FOR THE USE OF THE INFORMATION***** 4. Care should be taken in deriving conclusions from any data or information supplied. 5. Any use of the data or information supplied should state when the data or information was acquired and that it may now be out-of-date. *****COPYRIGHT OBLIGATIONS***** 6. All proprietary rights to the intellectual property in the data or information remain with the Crown as its sole property. 7. Modification of the data and information or the addition of the information does not confer copyright or any other form of property of the original material to a user. 8. All maps or reports that are derived from the data or information must acknowledge the Crown copyright, in the following way: Crown Copyright: Department of Conservation Te Papa Atawhai [year]. 9. This information resource may be passed onto another party, in either hard copy or electronic form. If a user does this, then it is recommended that they also supply this metadata record with the information resource.
The service dynamically produces the map of the areas of the Abruzzo Region in which the DOC (Controlled Designation of Origin) and DOCG (Controlled and Guaranteed Designation of Origin) vineyards fall, deduced from the Map of the wine-growing territories of the Abruzzo region.
Salmonid Enhancement Program (SEP) fish releases from 2015 to 2019 excluding spawning channel facilities. Releases are represented by pie charts on a regional level.Wild stocks of Pacific salmon have experienced significant declines in abundance over the past century. One of the management tools to compensate for these losses has been the use of hatcheries. Over time, hatcheries have also been used to mitigate for habitat losses, to support fisheries, for conservation, and for education.
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Recreation Hunting Permit Areas - spatial representation of those parts of DOC's Public Conservation Land where recreational hunting may take place. If hunting within these areas you MUST obtain a hunting permit first; either online at http://www.doc.govt.nz/parks-and-recreation/hunting/ or from your local DOC office. These data are based upon land parcels (cadastre) but are not suitable for accurate boundary definition.
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Public Conservation Land ("DOC Estate") for the South Island. Supplied by DOC Canterbury March 2009.
National Conservation Unit dataset. Nationally compiled dataset containing geospatial definitions of DOC management units (conservation units) defined by various acts of parliament and legislation.
The national conservation unit featureclass is integrated with the Department's national land register to provide textual descriptions of land administered by the Department.
Geospatial definition of Land administered by the Department of Conservation under legislation, and/or Land of interest to the Department.
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These boundaries represent the current DOC structure. The boundaries replace the existing Services Region boundaries which were in place from 2 September 2013.
These maps show for the first time an accurate georeferenced mosaic of the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, the Republic of Palau and their respective corresponding shallow water areas. Shallow-water (generally, less than 30 meters) bank and land areas in these areas were identified through analysis of Landsat 7 ETM+ satellite imagery. The mosaics are laid over ETOPO2 Bathymetric Data to provide an enhanced understanding of how the Atolls and Islands fit together. In addition selected islands and atolls are shown next to the mosaic. This project was conducted in support of the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force.
Data in this accession are best used with appropriate Geographic Information System (GIS) software.
The service dynamically produces the map of the areas of the Abruzzo Region where the DOC (Denominazione di Origine Controllata) and DOCG (Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita) vineyards fall under the Charter of the wine-growing territories of the Abruzzo region.
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A Marine Reserve is the government's most comprehensive tool in the provision of area-based biodiversity protection in the marine environment.
Marine reserves are specified areas of the sea and foreshore that are managed to preserve them in their natural state as the habitat of marine life for scientific study. Marine reserves may be established in areas that contain underwater scenery, natural features, or marine life of such distinctive quality, or so typical, beautiful or unique that their continued preservation is in the national interest.
Under the Marine Reserves Act 1971, the Department of Conservation is responsible for caring for and managing marine reserves. Management functions include marking marine reserve boundaries, law enforcement, issuing scientific permits and monitoring environmental changes.
Glossary of layers associated with the BLM Natl IRFMS Sagebrush Assessment and Geospatial Evaluation (SAGE) Data Interactive Map Viewer web map application.
Note: The DOC hosted version will be maintained through 2022, but is being retired in favor of an ArcGIS Online Hosted version of the same data. Those data can be found at: https://cadoc.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=921a7c243d074fa081af2b9d19be0315This is a digital Seismic Hazard Zone Map presenting areas where liquefaction and landslides may occur during a strong earthquake. Three types of geological hazards, referred to as seismic hazard zones, may be featured on the map: 1) liquefaction, 2) earthquake-induced landslides, and 3) overlapping liquefaction and earthquake-induced landslides. In addition, a fourth feature may be included representing areas not evaluated for liquefaction or earthquake-induced landslides. Developers of properties falling within any of the three zones may be required to investigate the potential hazard and mitigate its threat during the local permitting process.
The Urban Planning Code defines two types of areas for municipal maps: however, there are special cases:- Graphic documents may define sectors reserved for industrial or craft activities, in particular those incompatible with the neighbourhood of inhabited areas.- They delimit, where appropriate, the areas in which the reconstruction of a building destroyed by a disaster is not permitted.- The installations necessary for collective equipment, agricultural or forestry exploitation and the development of natural resources are not covered by the principle of inconstructibility resulting from a classification.
The Urban Planning Code defines two types of areas for municipal maps: however, there are special cases:- Graphic documents may define sectors reserved for industrial or craft activities, in particular those incompatible with the neighbourhood of inhabited areas.- They delimit, where appropriate, the areas in which the reconstruction of a building destroyed by a disaster is not permitted.- The installations necessary for collective equipment, agricultural or forestry exploitation and the development of natural resources are not covered by the principle of inconstructibility resulting from a classification.
Download a map document showing nearshore habitat in the Strait of Georgia. This map includes the following datasets: a kelp beds layer from GeoBC available herean eelgrass layer from Islands Trust Conservancy available herean eelgrass layer from the British Columbia Marine Conservation Analysis available here
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This COVADIS data standard concerns local planning documents (LDPs) and land use plans (POSs that are PLU). This data standard provides a technical framework describing in detail how to dematerialise these planning documents into a spatial database that can be used by a GIS tool and interoperable. This standard of data concerns both the graphic zoning plans, the superimposed requirements and the regulations applying to each type of area.This standard of COVADIS data was developed on the basis of the specifications for the dematerialisation of urban planning documents updated in 2012 by the CNIG, itself based on the consolidated version of the urban planning code dated 16 March 2012. The recommendations of these two documents are consistent even if their purpose is not the same. The COVADIS data standard provides definitions and a structure for organising and storing existing PLU/POS spatial data in an infrastructure in digital form, while the CNIG specification serves to frame the digitisation of such data. The ‘Data Structure’ section presented in this COVADIS standard provides additional recommendations for the storage of data files (see Part C). These are choices specific to the MAA and MEDDE data infrastructure that do not apply outside their context. Communal maps are the subject of another COVADIS data standard.
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The DOCOB, for Objective Document, is the document that allows for site management planning. 1.It makes an inventory of what is in the site (habitats, fauna, flora and socio-economic activities), 2.It assesses their conservation status, 3. It defines the objectives to be achieved and proposes management measures to be implemented. The objective document is prepared in a concerted manner by the Steering Committee (COPIL). Its assembly takes on average 2 years but each site is different (surface, activities, stakes...). Only the measures provided for in the DOCOB can be implemented and, above all, co-financed by the State and/or Europe. Each year, a review of the implementation of the projects describes the actual achievements and the results. A more in-depth evaluation of the implementation of DOCOB is requested from COPIL every 3 years. It is verified that the planned actions have been implemented and that they have had positive action (conservation, restoration) on habitats, fauna and flora of Community interest identified during the ecological diagnosis. The DOCOB may then be revised where COPIL or the Prefect deems it necessary, in particular when the document is no longer considered to be applicable.
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Spatial representation of DOC's land management units defined by various acts of parliament and legislation. The attributes in this dataset are derived from the National Property and Land Information System (NaPALIS), which is a centralised database for all Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) and Department of Conservation (DOC) administered land. Public Conservation Land (abbreviated to PCL) parcels are defined geographically, recognised, dedicated and managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long term conservation of nature with associated ecosystem services and cultural values.New Zealand's Public Conservation Land is managed under four main laws.Conservation Act 1987National Parks Act 1980Reserves Act 1977Wildlife Act 1953These manifest in numerous different types of protected area, the most important of which are:National ParksConservation ParksNature ReservesScientific ReservesScenic ReservesRecreation (and other) ReservesN.B. Combining Public Conservation Land, with Marine Reserves and Sanctuaries to Protect Marine Mammals is collectively known as Public Conservation Areas (PCA).*****LICENCE*****This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.*****DISCLAIMER***** 1. DOC makes no express or implied warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of the data or information, nor its suitability for any purpose. Errors are inevitably part of any database, and can arise by a number of means, from errors during field data collection, to errors during data entry. 2. DOC makes no warranties or representations as to possible infringement upon copyrights or other intellectual property rights of others in the data or information. 3. DOC will not accept liability for any direct, indirect, special or consequential damages, losses or expenses howsoever arising and relating to use, or lack of use, of the data or information supplied.*****GUIDELINES FOR THE USE OF THE INFORMATION***** 4. Care should be taken in deriving conclusions from any data or information supplied. 5. Any use of the data or information supplied should state when the data or information was acquired and that it may now be out-of-date.*****COPYRIGHT OBLIGATIONS***** 6. All proprietary rights to the intellectual property in the data or information remain with the Crown as its sole property. 7. Modification of the data and information or the addition of the information does not confer copyright or any other form of property of the original material to a user. 8. All maps or reports that are derived from the data or information must acknowledge the Crown copyright, in the following way: Crown Copyright: Department of Conservation Te Papa Atawhai [year]. 9. This information resource may be passed onto another party, in either hard copy or electronic form. If a user does this, then it is recommended that they also supply this metadata record with the information resource.