3 datasets found
  1. a

    Water and Sewer Districts of King County / wsdst area

    • king-snocoplanning.opendata.arcgis.com
    • gis-kingcounty.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Aug 28, 2014
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    King County (2014). Water and Sewer Districts of King County / wsdst area [Dataset]. https://king-snocoplanning.opendata.arcgis.com/maps/kingcounty::water-and-sewer-districts-of-king-county-wsdst-area
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    Dataset updated
    Aug 28, 2014
    Dataset authored and provided by
    King County
    Area covered
    Description

    This data layer describes the boundaries of combined water & sewer utility districts. This data does not describe water service or sewer service areas of the districts.

  2. a

    Sewer Districts / swrdst area

    • hub.arcgis.com
    • gis-kingcounty.opendata.arcgis.com
    Updated Nov 3, 2008
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    King County (2008). Sewer Districts / swrdst area [Dataset]. https://hub.arcgis.com/maps/kingcounty::sewer-districts-swrdst-area
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 3, 2008
    Dataset authored and provided by
    King County
    Area covered
    Description

    This data layer describes the boundaries of sewer districts in King County. These are district boundaries which do not always coincide with service area boundaries.

  3. n

    Data from: Characteristics of the urban sewer system and rat presence in...

    • data.niaid.nih.gov
    • dataone.org
    • +2more
    zip
    Updated Jun 28, 2022
    + more versions
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    Xiaocong Guo; Michael Lee; Kaylee Byers; Leah Helms; Kate Weinberger; Chelsea Himsworth (2022). Characteristics of the urban sewer system and rat presence in Seattle [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.mw6m90603
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    zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 28, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Public Health - Seattle & King County
    University of British Columbia
    British Columbia Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Health Centre
    Authors
    Xiaocong Guo; Michael Lee; Kaylee Byers; Leah Helms; Kate Weinberger; Chelsea Himsworth
    License

    https://spdx.org/licenses/CC0-1.0.htmlhttps://spdx.org/licenses/CC0-1.0.html

    Area covered
    Seattle
    Description

    Rats are abundant and ubiquitous in urban environments. There has been increasing attention to the need for evidence-based, integrated rat management and surveillance approaches because rats can compromise public health and impose economic costs. Yet there are few studies that characterize rat distributions in sewers and there are no studies that incorporate the complexity of sewer networks that encompass multiple sewer lines, all comprised of their own unique characteristics. To address this knowledge gap, this study identifies sewer characteristics that are associated with rat presence in the city of Seattle’s urban sewer system. We obtained sewer baiting data from 1752 geotagged manholes to monitor rat presence and constructed generalized additive models to account for spatial autocorrelation. Sewer rats were unevenly distributed across sampled manholes with clusters of higher rat presence at upper elevations, within sanitary pipes, narrower pipes, pipes at a shallower depth, and older pipes. These findings are important because identifying features of urban sewers that promote rat presence may allow municipalities to target areas for rat control activities and sewer maintenance. These findings suggest the need to evaluate additional characteristics of the surface environment and identify the factors driving rat movement within sewers, across the surface, and between the surface and the sewers. Methods Data was collected in the port city of Seattle, Washington USA (47.6°N, 122.3°W) between February 2016 and September 2019 as a part of Seattle’s ongoing rat sewer baiting program. In the baiting program, manholes across the city were geotagged in map grids, where all grids in one zone were baited before moving to the next zone. The method for monitoring a manhole includes an initial assessment with four non-toxic Talon Weather BlocTM bait blocks. Blocks were suspended from the manhole so that they hung just above the sewer surface. Bait consumption was measured 10 days after the initial visit to monitor rat presence. Rats were considered present in manholes if some bait was consumed and/or signs of rodents (e.g., rodent gnaw marks, rat droppings) were observed. Data regarding the consumption of non-toxic bait (rats were considered either present or absent in each manhole) were joined with three publicly accessible municipal datasets. These datasets included 10 manhole characteristics (point features), 21 sewer line characteristics (line features), and 2 surface characteristics. Two weather characteristics, temperature (average monthly temperature) and precipitation (cumulative monthly precipitation), were obtained from the Western Regional Climate Center and Seattle Weather Blog.

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Click to copy link
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King County (2014). Water and Sewer Districts of King County / wsdst area [Dataset]. https://king-snocoplanning.opendata.arcgis.com/maps/kingcounty::water-and-sewer-districts-of-king-county-wsdst-area

Water and Sewer Districts of King County / wsdst area

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Aug 28, 2014
Dataset authored and provided by
King County
Area covered
Description

This data layer describes the boundaries of combined water & sewer utility districts. This data does not describe water service or sewer service areas of the districts.

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