River Dee Special Area of Conservation (SAC) Comparative Macrophyte Surveys (2008)
The Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) commissioned ECUS Ltd. to undertake macrophyte survey work on the River Dee Special Area of Conservation (SAC) to inform a larger project aiming to determine the main variability components for macrophyte communities in rivers. The objective of the larger project, a partnership between CCW, Natural England, the Environment Agency (EA), Scottish Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA) and Scotland and Northern Ireland Forum For Environmental Research (SNIFFER), is to develop and test a statistically robust, standardised field sampling method for river macrophytes, to be used by the agencies for assessment of ecological and conservation status of rivers.
- Dull adnabod
- Rhychwant
- Dosbarthiad
- Ansawdd
- Allweddeiriau
- System Cyfeirio Gofodol
- Cynnwys
- Cyfyngiadau
- Cynnal a chadw
- Metadata
Dull adnabod
- Dynodydd
- NRW_DS110068
- Teitl Amgen
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- Arolygon cymharol o facroffytau ACA Afon Dyfrdwy 2008
- Laith Metadata
- English
- Datganiad
-
There are a variety of macrophyte survey methods currently used within the UK, which have been developed over the years for differing purposes and therefore have different emphasises built into their design. One standard method, developed by the NCC for classification of vegetation communities of British Rivers, was updated to become the JNCC Standard Common Standards Monitoring (CSM) methodology and is currently used to by the UK conservation agencies to determine the condition status of Riverine SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest) and SACs (Special Area of Conservation). The CSM methodology is based on the survey of 500 m stretches, recording macrophyte species present using a 3 point cover score. It was originally designed primarily as a means of surveying river reaches in order to record the maximum number of species present. Another commonly used survey method is the Mean Trophic Rank (MTR) methodology, developed by the Environment Agency to assess the impact of sewage treatment works on the trophic status of the rivers into which they discharge, as required by the EC Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive. The survey methodology, which uses a 100 m survey section and records macrophyte species using a 9 point cover scale, has been adopted in a slightly modified version as the new LEAFPACS methodology developed by the Environmental Protection Agencies (EA and SEPA) for the purposes of monitoring ecological status of rivers as required by the EU Water Framework Directive (WFD).
- Dyddiad cyfeirnod y set ddata (Cyhoeddiad)
- 2009-01-31
Ystod amser
- Dyddiad cychwyn
- 2008-07-16
- Dyddiad gorffen
- 2008-09-26
- Categori pwnc
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- Biota
Rhychwant
Rhychwant
- Hyd
- Wales (WLS)
Dosbarthiad
- Fformat - Math a Disgrifiad
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-
Documents
Documents
()
- Math
-
[A] Summary report - Paper and electronic version (PDF and MS Word) [B] Raw data - MS Excel [C] Map of sites - digital point data (Mapinfo table) [D] Photographs of sites (Mapinfo)
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Documents
Documents
()
Ansawdd
Ansawdd Data
- Cwmpas Ansawdd
- Dataset
- Datganiad
-
There are a variety of macrophyte survey methods currently used within the UK, which have been developed over the years for differing purposes and therefore have different emphasises built into their design. One standard method, developed by the NCC for classification of vegetation communities of British Rivers, was updated to become the JNCC Standard Common Standards Monitoring (CSM) methodology and is currently used to by the UK conservation agencies to determine the condition status of Riverine SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest) and SACs (Special Area of Conservation). The CSM methodology is based on the survey of 500 m stretches, recording macrophyte species present using a 3 point cover score. It was originally designed primarily as a means of surveying river reaches in order to record the maximum number of species present. Another commonly used survey method is the Mean Trophic Rank (MTR) methodology, developed by the Environment Agency to assess the impact of sewage treatment works on the trophic status of the rivers into which they discharge, as required by the EC Urban Waste Water Treatment Directive. The survey methodology, which uses a 100 m survey section and records macrophyte species using a 9 point cover scale, has been adopted in a slightly modified version as the new LEAFPACS methodology developed by the Environmental Protection Agencies (EA and SEPA) for the purposes of monitoring ecological status of rivers as required by the EU Water Framework Directive (WFD).
Allweddeiriau
Allweddair
- Math
- Theme
Dyfyniad
- Dyddiad (Cyhoeddiad)
- 2008-06-01
Allweddair
- NRW Thesaurus
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- macrophyte surveys
- macrophytes
- Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC)
- Common Standards Monitoring (CSM)
- river Dee (afon Dyfrdwy)
- Special Areas of Conservation (SAC) (see also Candidate Special Areas of Conservation cSAC)
- LEAFPACS
- marine and freshwater inventory
- Math
- Theme
Dyfyniad
- Dyddiad (Cyhoeddiad)
- 2023-12-31
System Cyfeirio Gofodol
Cynnwys
Gwybodaeth Cynnwys
Proffil CNC
Elfennau CNC
- Teitlau cysylltiedig CNC
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Determining the main variability components for macrophyte communities in rivers : JNCC and LEAFPACS macrophyte surveys on the River Dee
Cyfyngiadau
Cyfyngiadau
Cyfyngiadau ar Fynediad a Defnydd Cyhoeddus
- Math o Gyfyngiad
- Other restrictions
Cyfarwyddeb Cyfyngiadau Mynediad
- Cyfyngiadau
- no limitations
Testun cyfyngiadau mynediad
- Cyfyngiadau eraill
-
There are no access restrictions on this data. NRW may release, publish or disseminate it freely.
Defnyddiwch gyfyngiadau
- Cyfyngiadau Defnyddio
- Other restrictions
- Cyfyngiadau eraill
-
© CNC/NRW Data may be re-used under the terms of the Open Government Licence providing it is done so, acknowledging both the source and NRW's copyright. It is the recipient's responsibility to ensure the data is fit for the intended purpose.
Metadata
Metadata
- Dynodydd Ffeil
- 4f4c4942-4343-5764-6473-313130303638 XML
- Laith Metadata
- English
- Dynodydd Rhiant
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Monitoring and Surveillance of Special Areas of Conservation (SACs) in Wales
NRW_DS110509
- Math o adnodd
- Dataset
- Dyddiad Metadata
- 2024-05-31T09:42:55.577Z
- Enw Safonol Metadata
- NRW
- Fersiwn Metadata
-
1.0