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2016 WCBSP Ecosystem Threat Status

The Western Cape’s 2016 Ecosystem Threat Status layer was developed to more accurately reflect the current threat status of ecosystems in the Western Cape Province, especially in terms of habitat loss (criterion A1). Ecosystems are based on the SA Vegetation Map (2012 version) and relevant indigenous forest types (DAFF,

2010), as per the national approach to assessing ecosystem threat. Threat status is provided for each ecosystem according to three assessments: (1) the national assessment in 2011 (note: threatened ecosystems identified in the NBA 2011 are the same as those listed in the gazette in December 2011); (2) CapeNature’s 2014 assessment of criterion A1 (habitat loss); and (3) the highest status achieved in either the national assessment or CapeNature’s 2016 assessment of criterion A1 (habitat loss). This latter category is considered the best available status for the Western Cape Province (see field "WC_ETS2016" in this shapefile).

Simple

Date (Publication)
2016
Edition

1.0

Purpose

The 2016 Western Cape Ecosystem Threat Status should be considered as best available science in all land-use planning and decision-making. It should be considered as one of the lead informants when assessing significance ratings of development applications or in calculating biodiversity offsets. Threatened ecosystems identified according to CapeNature’s 2014 or 2016 assessments will not, however, trigger a basic assessment in terms of listing notice 3 of the NEMA EIA regulations as they have not yet been gazetted.


Until such time, ‘Listed threatened ecosystems’ will continue to refer to those NBA 2011 threatened ecosystems which were published in terms of NEMBA, and are noted in the attribute table accompanying this product (see field "NBA_ETS11"). It is also important to note that while the original extent of each ecosystem has been mapped, a basic assessment report in terms of the EIA regulations is only triggered in remaining natural habitat within each ecosystem and not in portions of the ecosystem where natural habitat has already been irreversibly lost.

Status
On going
Custodian
  CapeNature - Therese Forsyth ( The GIS Officer )
Private Bag X5014, , Stellenbosch, , 7599 , South Africa
tforsyth@capenature.co.za
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed
Theme
  • Threatened Ecosystems

Place
  • South Africa

  • Western Cape

Access constraints
Copyright
Use constraints
otherRestictions
Other constraints

All data are supplied with no expressed or implied warranty as to their suitability for purpose, planimetric accuracy or completeness. The WCNCB cannot be held responsible for any errors, which may occur in provided data sets. DEADP will not incur any legal liability pertaining to this data or use thereof.

Spatial representation type
Vector
Denominator
50000
Language
English
Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Environment
Begin date
2016-01-01
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Reference system identifier
WGS 1984

Distributor

Distributor
  SANBI
Name

ZIP

Version

1

OnLine resource
A list of services published are available at this URL. ( WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link )

BGIS Map Services

OnLine resource
A list of spatial data-sets are available at this URL. ( WWW:LINK-1.0-http--related )

BGIS Spatial Datasets

Hierarchy level
Dataset
Statement

The original extent of ecosystems falling within the Western Cape Province and the current remaining extent of those ecosystems were both assessed in a Geographic Information System (GIS), using a UTM34 South projection. Ecosystem boundaries are based on the most recent version of the Vegetation Map of South Africa (SANBI, 2016; nvm2012beta2_wgs84_Geo.shp), as well as national indigenous forest types (DAFF, 2010), as per the national approach to ecosystem threat assessment.


Results from three threat assessments were joined to this ecosystem map: (1) the national assessment in 2011 (note: threatened ecosystems identified in the NBA 2011 are the same as those listed in the gazette in December 2011); (2) CapeNature’s 2014 assessment of criterion A1 (habitat loss); and (3) the highest status achieved in either the national assessment or CapeNature’s 2016 assessment of criterion A1 (habitat loss). The 2016 assessment of habitat loss primarily utilized CapeNature’s revised 2013/14 land cover product, as well as the 2010 Western Cape Biodiversity Framework land cover data. All land cover classes representing the outright loss of natural habitat (e.g. cultivated areas, forestry plantations, mines, dams, urban or built-up areas) or areas of severe degradation (e.g. pure invasive alien plant stands, significantly over-grazed or heavily eroded areas devoid of vegetative cover) were removed from the ecosystem map described above to create a remaining natural habitat layer.


In addition, all areas falling within DAFF’s 2007, 2013, or 2015 field crop boundary datasets were removed from the remnant layer described above. Additional on-screen digitizing of cultivated areas was also carried out where obvious habitat loss had occurred in the Sandveld region, according to SPOT5 2014 imagery and January 2016 Landsat8 imagery. The resulting remnants layer was used to calculate the amount (area) of each ecosystem remaining in good ecological condition. Compared to the original extent, the intact proportion of each ecosystem could be determined and used to categorize its threat status according to national thresholds.

File identifier
ab0f5450-312a-4aa1-94eb-bb4ec0a12ed3 XML
Metadata language
English
Character set
UTF8
Date stamp
2017-05-24T11:02:10
Metadata standard name

SANS 1878

Metadata standard version

FGDC-STD-001-1998

Distributor
  SANBI - ( The Metadata Manager )
Kirstenbosch Research Centre , Cape Town , Claremont , 7735 , South Africa
+27 21 799 8738
 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

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Keywords

Threatened Ecosystems

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