The City of Winnipeg Diversity Dashboard data conform to Statistics Canada anonymization standards.
For anonymization - when there are fewer than 10 employees who self-declare belonging to an equity group (15 in the case of Persons with Disabilities), the exact percentage of individuals in that category is redacted for privacy and the "Too few to report" column flag is set to "TRUE".
The "Too few to report" column flag is also set to "TRUE" when data was not yet collected (e.g. for 2SLGBTQQIA+ Peoples before 2020).
The City of Winnipeg has updated its terminology through community consultation and is committed to refining it as needed. Because of this, our terminology in this open data set may change.
On our journey towards greater inclusion, the City of Winnipeg understands the importance of language and it will embrace new terminology as it evolves and is recommended and / or determined by the equity groups at the City.
External references:
Population level statistics for Persons with Disabilities are taken from Statistics Canada, Table 13-10-0750-01, Persons with and without disabilities aged 15 years and over, census metropolitan areas.
Population level statistics for 2SLGBTQQIA+ Peoples are taken from Statistics Canada, Table 13-10-0876-01, Socioeconomic characteristics of the LGB+ population, 2019 to 2021, Prairie provinces.
Population level statistics for Indigenous Peoples, Racialized Peoples, and Newcomers (2016-2021) adapted from Statistics Canada Census:
Statistics Canada, 2023. Census Profile, 2021 Census, Statistics Canada Catalogue number 98-316-X2021001, Ottawa. Released March 29, 2023.
Statistics Canada, 2017. Census Profile, 2016 Census, Statistics Canada Catalogue number 98-316-X2016001, Ottawa. Released February 8, 2017.
This does not constitute an endorsement by Statistics Canada of this product.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
We used twelve microsatellite loci to resolve genetic diversity and structure of sauger (n= 872) across nine waterbodies in the Nelson-Churchill watershed. Five waterbodies contained low numbers of walleye × sauger hybrids. Overall, genetic diversity were highest in Lake Winnipeg, the largest lake in the watershed, and lowest in Lakes Manitoba and Winnipegosis. Despite their close geographic proximity, genetic differentiation between Lake Winnipeg and Lake Manitoba/Lake Winnipegosis were moderately high and were found to have low levels of historical and on-going gene flow. On the other hand, high connectivity, based on low levels of genetic differentiation and high estimates of on-going gene flow were found between Lake Winnipeg and the Red River, Assiniboine River, Lac du Bonnet, and Stephens Lake, which span a larger geographic area but are more connected in the watershed. Clustering and genetic differentiation-based methods indicated that fish in Lake Winnipeg and Lake Manitoba/Lake Winnipegosis belong to different genetic groups, but most individuals from all sites exhibited some level of ancestral admixture, particularly fish sampled in the river systems.
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
The Living Prairie Museum Herbarium is located within the Living Prairie Museum Interpretative Centre (LPM) located in the City of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Founded in 1967, the LPM Herbarium contains over 250 vascular plant specimens, with a focus on plants found in native tall grass prairie habitat. Many of the specimens were collected during surveys by the International Biological Program, which lead to the protection of the 12 hectare (30 acre) remnant tall grass prairie site that would become LPM. The establishment and registration of our digitized herbarium is an important step towards sharing the diversity of tall grass prairie species with the international community. This dataset represents the digitized vascular plant specimens collected mostly within the city of Winnipeg.
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The City of Winnipeg Diversity Dashboard data conform to Statistics Canada anonymization standards.
For anonymization - when there are fewer than 10 employees who self-declare belonging to an equity group (15 in the case of Persons with Disabilities), the exact percentage of individuals in that category is redacted for privacy and the "Too few to report" column flag is set to "TRUE".
The "Too few to report" column flag is also set to "TRUE" when data was not yet collected (e.g. for 2SLGBTQQIA+ Peoples before 2020).
The City of Winnipeg has updated its terminology through community consultation and is committed to refining it as needed. Because of this, our terminology in this open data set may change.
On our journey towards greater inclusion, the City of Winnipeg understands the importance of language and it will embrace new terminology as it evolves and is recommended and / or determined by the equity groups at the City.
External references:
Population level statistics for Persons with Disabilities are taken from Statistics Canada, Table 13-10-0750-01, Persons with and without disabilities aged 15 years and over, census metropolitan areas.
Population level statistics for 2SLGBTQQIA+ Peoples are taken from Statistics Canada, Table 13-10-0876-01, Socioeconomic characteristics of the LGB+ population, 2019 to 2021, Prairie provinces.
Population level statistics for Indigenous Peoples, Racialized Peoples, and Newcomers (2016-2021) adapted from Statistics Canada Census:
Statistics Canada, 2023. Census Profile, 2021 Census, Statistics Canada Catalogue number 98-316-X2021001, Ottawa. Released March 29, 2023.
Statistics Canada, 2017. Census Profile, 2016 Census, Statistics Canada Catalogue number 98-316-X2016001, Ottawa. Released February 8, 2017.
This does not constitute an endorsement by Statistics Canada of this product.