Great Lakes Nearshore Waters Assessment
Water quality and ecosystem health data used to conduct a cumulative effects assessment of Canadian Great Lakes nearshore waters in support of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement are included in this dataset. The data was collected by various government and non-government agencies and organizations and integrated into this dataset to allow the assessment to be conducted. By conducting a regular, systematic assessment of cumulative effects in the nearshore waters of the Great Lakes Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) is able to identify areas of high quality and areas under stress. Knowledge of ecological thresholds, other Great Lakes assessments, stressor information, indicators and local and traditional ecological knowledge will be used to aid in: 1) the identification and mapping of high quality nearshore areas and areas that are or may become subject to high stress and; 2) the determination of factors and cumulative effects that are causing stress or threats. Cumulative effects impacting the nearshore and future threats to areas of high ecological value will be better understood and the knowledge shared will assist in priority setting for science and management at a meaningful and practical spatial scale within each Great Lake and connecting channel.
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Date Created
2012-05-18
Date Published
2015-09-08
Temporal Coverage
2019-12-12 - Present
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124
All time access
564
Source(s) and Citation
Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada. (2015-09-08). Great Lakes Nearshore Waters Assessment. Government of Canada; Environment and Climate Change Canada. http://ec.gc.ca
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great lakes, environment, cumulative stress, assessment, monitoring, ecosystem, transboundary, water, lake ontario, lake erie, lake huron, lake superior, ontario, fish consumption, beach postings, treated drinking water, cladophora, cyanobacteria, shoreline type, littoral barriers, tributary connectivity, benthic community, sediment quality, water quality, human use, coastal processes, nuisance and harmful algae, contaminants in water and sediment, dissolved oxygen, aquatic ecosystems, oversee and manage site conditions, expand scientific knowledge / develop new methodologies for assessing site conditions, 1.3.4. great lakes, strategic policy branch, ontario region
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