39c267c0-5014-4e34-85f8-2318c4c74787
eng
utf8
dataset
Natural England
data.services@naturalengland.org.uk
pointOfContact
2020-03-19
Environment Agency Metadata Profile
1.1
http://www.opengis.net/def/crs/EPSG/0/27700
Priority River Habitat - Rivers
2015-09-03
creation
2017-07-10
publication
f7932e02-0396-41dc-8106-f7dcd5e539d3
"One of the two datasets that make up the Priority River Habitat Map. Consists of rivers and streams that exhibit a high degree of naturalness. The naturalness classification used to map priority river habitat is based on recent work to review the river SSSI series. It evaluates four main components of habitat integrity: hydrological, physical, physico-chemical (water quality) and biological. An additional classification of the naturalness of headwaters (defined as streams with a catchment area of <10km2 to coincide with WFD typology boundaries) uses land cover data as a surrogate for direct information on river habitat condition (information which is generally lacking on headwaters). Streams and rivers operating under natural processes, free from anthropogenic impact and with a characteristic and dynamic mosaic of small-scale habitats that supports characteristic species assemblages (including priority species), are the best and most sustainable expression of river ecosystems. Key elements are:
a natural flow regime; natural nutrient and sediment delivery regimes;
minimal physical modifications to the channel, banks and riparian zone; natural longitudinal and lateral hydrological and biological connectivity; an absence of non-native species; low intensity fishery activities.
These conditions provide the best defence against climate change, maximising the ability of riverine ecosystems to adapt to changing conditions. They also provide the most valuable and effective transitional links with other priority habitats, including lakes, mires and coastal habitats. In English rivers and streams, high levels of naturalness are rare.
" Attribution statement: © Natural England copyright. Contains Ordnance Survey data © Crown copyright and database right [year].
Natural England
data.services@naturalengland.org.uk
https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/natural-england
Natural England Website
pointOfContact
notPlanned
OpenData
theme
NEbatch4
theme
Habitats and biotopes
theme
GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0
2018-07-25
publication
geonetwork.thesaurus.external.theme.httpinspireeceuropaeutheme-theme
Open Government Licence
otherRestrictions
license
copyright
There are no public access constraints to this data. Use of this data is subject to the licence identified.
vector
eng
utf8
environment
-5.7
1.8
50
55.8
http://data.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/doc/country/england
2099-12-31
Open format | Shapefile (SHP)
10.2.2
Open format | Keyhole Markup Language (KML)
KML
http://naturalengland-defra.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/priority-river-habitat-rivers-england
WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link
ArcGIS Open Dataset record page
ArcGIS Open Dataset record page
https://environment.data.gov.uk/DefraDataDownload/?mapService=NE/PriorityRiverHabitatRiversEngland&Mode=spatial
DSP:ESRI
priority_river_habitat_rivers_england_DOWNLOAD
Priority River Habitat - Rivers (England) DOWNLOAD
https://environment.data.gov.uk/spatialdata/priority-river-habitat-rivers-england/wfs
WFS
priority_river_habitat_rivers_england_WFS
Priority River Habitat - Rivers (England) WFS
https://environment.data.gov.uk/spatialdata/priority-river-habitat-rivers-england/wms
WMS
priority_river_habitat_rivers_england_WMS
Priority River Habitat - Rivers (England) WMS
dataset
Rivers were selected as priority habitat based on naturalness criteria (physical. hydrological, chemical, biological), capturing the most natural remaining examples as far as can be ascertained from available data. This means that many examples of river types included in the UK BAP definition (such as chalk rivers) are excluded from the priority habitat map as they have been significantly modified and degraded over the centuries• Given that this national analysis is relatively coarse (particularly in respect of headwater areas), there is considerable scope for local ground-truthing and refinement. A refinement exercise was undertaken after the national data was created to further refine the dataset using local knowledge and interpretation by Environment Agency and Natural England staff, as well as some non-governmental organisations such as Wildlife Trusts etc. It is envisaged that this refinement exercise will be ongoing.River sections originally derived from EA Digital River Network.
asNeeded