Service Description: ESI data characterize the marine and coastal environments and wildlife based on sensitivity to spilled oil.
Service ItemId: d432f7e2548f4773bae5dbd1f6a1e15e
Has Versioned Data: false
Max Record Count: 10000
Supported query Formats: JSON
Supports applyEdits with GlobalIds: False
Supports Shared Templates: True
All Layers and Tables
Layers:
Tables:
Description: There are three main components to the ESI: shoreline habitats, sensitive biological resources, and human-use resources. The shoreline and intertidal areas are ranked based on sensitivity determined by: (1) Shoreline type (substrate, grain size, tidal elevation, origin); (2) Exposure to wave and tidal energy; (3) Biological productivity and sensitivity; and (4) Ease of cleanup. The biology layers focus on threatened/endangered species, areas of high concentration and areas where sensitive life stages may occur. Supporting data tables provide species/location-specific abundance, seasonality, status, life history, and source information Human use resources mapped include managed areas (parks, refuges, critical habitats, etc) and resources that may be impacted by oiling and/or clean-up, such as beaches, archaeological sites marinas etc. ESIs are available for the majority of the US coastline, as well as the US territories. ESI data are available in a variety of GIS formats as well as PDF maps. For more information go to or to download complete ESI data sets go to: http://response.restoration.noaa.gov/esi For information specific to the Central California ESI data, go to: ESI data characterize the marine and coastal environments and wildlife based on sensitivity to spilled oil. There are three main components: shoreline habitats, sensitive biological resources, and human-use resources. The shoreline and intertidal areas are ranked based on sensitivity determined by: (1) Shoreline type (substrate, grain size, tidal elevation, origin); (2) Exposure to wave and tidal energy; (3) Biological productivity and sensitivity; and (4) Ease of cleanup. The biology layers focus on threatened/endangered species, areas of high concentration and areas where sensitive life stages may occur. Supporting data tables provide species/location-specific abundance, seasonality, status, life history, and source information Human use resources mapped include managed areas (parks, refuges, critical habitats, etc) and resources that may be impacted by oiling and/or clean-up, such as beaches, archaeological sites marinas etc. ESIs are available for the majority of the US coastline, as well as the US territories. ESI data are available in a variety of GIS formats as well as PDF maps. For more information go to or to download complete ESI data sets go to: http://response.restoration.noaa.gov/esi For information specific to the Central California ESI data, go to:
http://nosdataexplorer.noaa.gov/NOSDataExplorer/rest/find/document?searchText=esi%20AND%20central%20AND%20california&start=1&max=100&f=georss&dojo.preventCache=1342447577091
The Central California ESI data were compiled in 2006.
Copyright Text: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), National Ocean Service, Office of Response and Restoration, Emergency Response Division
Spatial Reference: 4269 (4269)
Initial Extent:
XMin: -124.220244585521
YMin: 36.2350871981344
XMax: -119.656869918479
YMax: 38.2775365796271
Spatial Reference: 4269 (4269)
Full Extent:
XMin: -123.501124927
YMin: 34.216658995
XMax: -120.375989577
YMax: 38.1249696360001
Spatial Reference: 4269 (4269)
Units: esriDecimalDegrees
Child Resources:
Info
SharedTemplates
Supported Operations:
Query
ConvertFormat
Get Estimates