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Current Version: 10.81

Service Description: BackgroundThe current version of CARI is a compilation of local, regional, and statewide aquatic resource GIS datasets into a standardized, seamless, statewide coverage of aquatic resources employing a common wetland classification system. In addition to this GIS, CARI can be viewed on www.EcoAtlas.org (CARI v2.2, released in Dec 2023),The CARI v2.2 dataset includes and incorporates data from a number of sources:The National Wetland Inventory (NWI, last released in 2023) of the US Fish and Wildlife Service;The National Hydrography Dataset (NHD, last updated in Sep, 2023) of the US Geological Survey, last updated in 2022; Four regional datasets developed by SFEIs GIS team using CARIs standardized, and more detailed, mapping protocols and used to demonstrate the WRAMP framework:Delta Aquatic Resource Inventory (DARI v1.1) - 2022San Francisco Bay Area Aquatic Resources Inventory (BAARI v2.1) - 2017Lake Tahoe Basin (TARIv2.1) - 2016Laguna de Santa Rosa Plain (near Santa Rosa ,CA. NCARI) - 2013, and Six County Aquatic Resources Inventory (including Sacramento, Placer, Yolo, El Dorado, Yuba, and Sutter Counties, California) developed by the US Army Corps of Engineers (Sacramento District) through federal funding - 2010. Subsequently reviewed and filtered by SFEI to remove duplicates and out of date and lower quality data in 2023.Individual vernal pools mapped by SFEI - 2023Salinity classification produced by SFEI - 2023Bar-Built Estuaries Lagoons created by the Central Coast Wetlands Group (data published in 2009, 2012, and 2016)National Estuarine Research Reserve High Resolution Land Cover (data from 2006, 2008, 2013, and 2016)Vernal Pool mapping by Witham, C.W., 2021Sierra Nevada Multi-Source Meadow Polygons Compilation (v2.0)SFEI Automated Individual Vernal Pools 2023Wet Meadows by UC DavisData sources specifically related to Coastal Habitats (Eelgrass, Coastal Dunes, Beaches, and Rocky Intertidal): Eelgrass compilation by National Marine Fisheries Service West Coast Region (data digitized from 2005, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020)SFEI Elevation-Modeled Beach/Rocky Intertidal Habitats classified via Environmental Sensitivity Index (ESI) data from NOAA - 2022. Please see the CARI Data Compilation Methods And Considerations > Wetland Data Integration/Development > Rocky Intertidal/Beaches section for more information.Conserving Californias Coastal Habitats Coastal Dune and Beach polygons from The Nature Conservancy - 2018CalVeg polygons associated with coastal dune habitats by the U.S. Forest Service - 2018VegCAMP dune habitat data by the California Department of Fish and WildlifePt. Reyes NP, Muir Woods, and Golden Gate NRA VegCAMP - 2003Pismo State Beach and Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area VegCAMP - 2015San Nicolas Island VegCAMP - 2013Santa Cruz Island VegCAMP - 2007 Santa Clara River Parkway VegCAMP - 2007California Natural Diversity Database coastal dune polygons from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife - 2009Additional SF Bay Beaches digitized by SFEI staff and in consultation with RB2 Waterboard staff - 2022Humboldt Dunes published by University of California Santa BarbraCARI is the only statewide aquatic resource dataset that has been compiled and standardized to a common classification system. However, CARI dataset varies in detail and accuracy across the state, and represents different time periods for different areas. Users are advised to get familiar with the level of detail available for their area/s of interest to understand the potentially different levels of mapping details represented across their area/s of interest. Future releases of CARI will incorporate updated data sources as they become available. In order for new datasets to be integrated into future releases of CARI, they must meet the minimum standards discussed in the CARI SOP.The vision for CARI is that it will be used by resource agencies, city and county land-use planners, scientists, and other stakeholders as the go-to map to visualize and summarize aquatic resources in their regions for monitoring, and assessment purposes. As more stakeholders use the online wetland monitoring and assessment tools on EcoAtlas, regional interests will improve the map by editing it. EcoAtlas has an online CARI editing tool that allows users to employ the CARI mapping standards and methods to submit suggested updates by submitting direct online edits or by uploading a KML or GIS file. More information on CARI, including definitions, details and methods can be found online at: http://www.sfei.org/CARI.Description of Updates in CARI version 2.2CARI v2.2 further implements the approach first utilized in v1.0 to automate incorporation of the most recent and highest quality data based on available metadata and spatial intersections into CARI for the entirety of the state, rather than just the coastal HUC watersheds updated in v1.0. Furthermore additional work was done to refine the integration of national and regional datasets and crosswalk it to the CARI classification system. Below are listed some of the specific improvements in this latest version of CARI:Integration of the most recent NHD and NWI mapping for the entire stateReview and filtering of Six-County data to remove overlapping mapping and only include data that was more recent and accurate than other available dataImprove the classification and refinement of lake and depression polygons while integrating features from multiple datasets.Address duplicative mapping, overlaps, and edge-effect artifacts from integration of multiple datasetsIntegrated wet meadows dataset provided by UC Davis Integrated individual vernal pools mapped by SFEISalinity classifications for CARI features produced by SFEIDescription of Updates in CARI version 1.0CARI v1.0 represents a significant upgrade to how CARI is compiled. A scripted approach is now employed in order to allow incorporation of the more recent and highest quality regions of different datasets to be identified, using available metadata, and incorporated into CARI. This allows updates to CARI from datasets such as NHD and NWI to be accomplished more easily and quickly. In addition a number of additional datasets are incorporated in order to capture a number of coastal aquatic feature types such as beaches, rocky intertidal, and coastal dunes. For more information please see the CARI SOP which can be found at http://www.sfei.org/CARI. CARI v1.0 was released in September 2022.Description of Updates in CARI version 0.3BAARI v2.1 (2017) Streams, Wetlands and Baylands were integrated into CARIStream data from the Santa Clara Valley Water Districts 2004 Santa Clara Valley Creeks replaced the NHD streams in approximately the Santa Clara County portion of the Pajaro River watershed, including the Pajaro river itself and Llagas, Uvas/Carnadero and Pacheco Creek watersheds. These streams were then classified by SFEI as Natural or Unnatural.CARI v0.3 was released in December 2017Description of Updates in CARI version 0.2Revised streams and wetlands from TARI v2.1(2016) were integrated into the CARI v0.2 dataset. CARI v0.2 was released in May 2016.CARI version 0.1CARI v0 was released in June 2014.Description of Attribute Fields in CARICARI consists of 2 feature classes: Wetlands (polygons) and Streams (lines). The feature attributes serve both to classify the wetland type and to provide information about the source of the data. For more details about attributes, mapping methodology, and the methods of compiling multiple data sources into CARI refer to the CARI SOP available at http://www.sfei.org/CARI.WETLANDSclickcode: an alphanumeric code based on the CARI wetland classification (as presented in Table 1, below).clicklabel: a detailed description of a features wetland type. Clicklabel is the most detailed classification provided by CARI. Original classifications from component datasets (see “orig_class) are translated or "crosswalked” into CARIs classification system. While CARIs component datasets may provide more detail for certain types of wetlands, CARI provides a single statewide classification for wetland types, e.g. "Depressional Perennial Natural Emergent". Major classes within the click label field include: wetlands and (deep) open water. Classes and types include: depressions, playas, estuarine, lacustrine, marine, riverine, lagoon, and slope.name: the name of a particular wetland feature. (e.g. Alpine Lake)orig_dataset: the original source dataset for a feature that was integrated into CARI orig_class: original classification of the wetland in the source dataset. Source datasets (e.g. NWI, BAARI) use different classification systems. The orig_class field preserves that information.organization: the agency or organization that originally mapped the wetland featureorig_dataset_pubyear: The year that the original dataset was publishedprocess_adjustment: Notes indicating how the original dataset was adjusted to fit CARI Standardssource_data: a description of the imagery or other primary data source, including year of collection, from which the wetland feature was identified and mappedsource_estimatedyear: Most recent estimated year of source data from source data fieldorig_scale: Scale that original dataset was digitized at or image scalelegend_headings: In EcoAtlas.org, legend_headings is the value that appears in the legend heading.legcode: a 1-3 letter code signifying the major wetland class, associated with the leglabellevel2 field. Provides less detail than clickcode.leglabellevel1: Common terminology for a features wetland type. In EcoAtlas.org, Leglabellevel1 is the value that appears in the legend, when you click on a particular feature to identify it, and in analyses of wetland areas generated by EcoAtlas Landscape Profile Tool. leglabellevel2: Major classification (less detailed) of the wetland classification provided by the click label field. E.g. "Depressional".major_class: General category that distinguishes open water from wetland areas. Corresponds with the first letter of “clickcode”.wetland_class: More specific wetland classification than major class. Corresponds with the second letter of “clickcode”anthropogenic_modifier: Classification that indicates if the aquatic features physical structure has been significantly impacted by anthropogenic activities. e.g a depressional wetland occurring due to water backing up behind a man made berm or levee. Corresponds with the third letter of “clickcode”wetland_type: Wetland type that provides additional wetland classification speciation in the context of the wetland_class. This wetland classification is consistent with CRAM module types. Corresponds with the fourth letter of “clickcode”wetland_subtype: Wetland type that provides additional wetland classification speciation in the context of the wetland class and wetland types. Corresponds with the fifth letter of “clickcode”tidal_modifier: Indicates tidal influence on an aquatic resource. Corresponds with the sixth letter of “clickcode”vegetation_modifier: Indicates the dominant type of vegetation for an aquatic feature. Corresponds with the seventh and last letter of “clickcode”salinity_modifier: Classification of salinity from six classes: Fresh (less than 0.5 ppt salinity), Oligohaline (0.5-5 ppt), Mesohaline (5-18 ppt), Saline (greater than 18 ppt), Bar-Built (Variable), Undefined.salinity_source: Generalized description of the source data used to assign the salinity modifier.salinity_additional_information: A description of the source data that offers a greater level of detail.lastupdate: the date that the CARI integration script was last run to integrate that featureCARI_id: Unique id for that CARI featureSTREAMSclickcode: an alphanumeric code for the wetland classification (as presented in Table 1, below). clicklabel: a detailed description of a features wetland type. Clicklabel is the most detailed classification provided by CARI. Original classifications from component datasets (see “orig_class”) are translated or "crosswalked” into CARIs classification system. Clicklabel values include: "Fluvial Natural", "Fluvial Unnatural", "Tidal Natural", and "Tidal Unnatural".name: the name of a particular wetland feature. (e.g. Pajaro River)orig_dataset: the original source dataset for a feature that was integrated into CARIorig_class: Original classification of the wetland in the source dataset. Source datasets (e.g. NWI, BAARI) use different classification systems. The orig_class field preserves that information.organization: the agency or organization that originally mapped the wetland featureorig_dataset_pubyear: The year that the original dataset was publishedprocess_adjustment: Notes indicating how the original dataset was adjusted to fit CARI Standardssource_data: a description of the imagery or other primary data source from which the wetland feature was identified and mappedsource_estimatedyear: Most recent estimated year of source data from source data fieldorig_scale: Scale that original dataset was digitized at or image scalelegheader: In EcoAtlas.org, legheader is the value that appears in the legend heading. "Drainage Features" is the only value for legheader.legcode: a 1 or 2 letter code identifying whether the major stream class has tidal influence (TR) or not (R), associated with the leglabel field. Provides less detail than clickcode.leglabel: Common terminology for a features wetland type. In EcoAtlas.org, Leglabel is the value that appears in the legend, when you click on a particular feature to identify it, and in analyses of wetland area generated by EcoAtlas Landscape Profile tool. Leglabel values include:"Fluvial" and "Tidal". major_class: General category that distinguishes open water from wetland areas. Corresponds with the first letter of “clickcode”.CRAM_wetland_type: Wetland type that provides additional wetland classification speciation in the context of the wetland_class. This wetland classification is consistent with CRAM module types. Corresponds with the second letter of “clickcode”anthropogenic_modifiers: Classification that indicates if the aquatic features physical structure has been significantly impacted by anthropogenic activities. e.g a channel that has been straightened through human engineering efforts. Corresponds with the third letter of “clickcode”lastupdate: the date that the CARI integration script was last run to integrate that featureCARI_id: Unique id for that CARI feature

Map Name: Layers

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Layers: Description: BackgroundThe current version of CARI is a compilation of local, regional, and statewide aquatic resource GIS datasets into a standardized, seamless, statewide coverage of aquatic resources employing a common wetland classification system. In addition to this GIS, CARI can be viewed on www.EcoAtlas.org (CARI v2.2, released in Dec 2023),The CARI v2.2 dataset includes and incorporates data from a number of sources:The National Wetland Inventory (NWI, last released in 2023) of the US Fish and Wildlife Service;The National Hydrography Dataset (NHD, last updated in Sep, 2023) of the US Geological Survey, last updated in 2022; Four regional datasets developed by SFEIs GIS team using CARIs standardized, and more detailed, mapping protocols and used to demonstrate the WRAMP framework:Delta Aquatic Resource Inventory (DARI v1.1) - 2022San Francisco Bay Area Aquatic Resources Inventory (BAARI v2.1) - 2017Lake Tahoe Basin (TARIv2.1) - 2016Laguna de Santa Rosa Plain (near Santa Rosa ,CA. NCARI) - 2013, and Six County Aquatic Resources Inventory (including Sacramento, Placer, Yolo, El Dorado, Yuba, and Sutter Counties, California) developed by the US Army Corps of Engineers (Sacramento District) through federal funding - 2010. Subsequently reviewed and filtered by SFEI to remove duplicates and out of date and lower quality data in 2023.Individual vernal pools mapped by SFEI - 2023Salinity classification produced by SFEI - 2023Bar-Built Estuaries Lagoons created by the Central Coast Wetlands Group (data published in 2009, 2012, and 2016)National Estuarine Research Reserve High Resolution Land Cover (data from 2006, 2008, 2013, and 2016)Vernal Pool mapping by Witham, C.W., 2021Sierra Nevada Multi-Source Meadow Polygons Compilation (v2.0)SFEI Automated Individual Vernal Pools 2023Wet Meadows by UC DavisData sources specifically related to Coastal Habitats (Eelgrass, Coastal Dunes, Beaches, and Rocky Intertidal): Eelgrass compilation by National Marine Fisheries Service West Coast Region (data digitized from 2005, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020)SFEI Elevation-Modeled Beach/Rocky Intertidal Habitats classified via Environmental Sensitivity Index (ESI) data from NOAA - 2022. Please see the CARI Data Compilation Methods And Considerations > Wetland Data Integration/Development > Rocky Intertidal/Beaches section for more information.Conserving Californias Coastal Habitats Coastal Dune and Beach polygons from The Nature Conservancy - 2018CalVeg polygons associated with coastal dune habitats by the U.S. Forest Service - 2018VegCAMP dune habitat data by the California Department of Fish and WildlifePt. Reyes NP, Muir Woods, and Golden Gate NRA VegCAMP - 2003Pismo State Beach and Oceano Dunes State Vehicular Recreation Area VegCAMP - 2015San Nicolas Island VegCAMP - 2013Santa Cruz Island VegCAMP - 2007 Santa Clara River Parkway VegCAMP - 2007California Natural Diversity Database coastal dune polygons from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife - 2009Additional SF Bay Beaches digitized by SFEI staff and in consultation with RB2 Waterboard staff - 2022Humboldt Dunes published by University of California Santa BarbraCARI is the only statewide aquatic resource dataset that has been compiled and standardized to a common classification system. However, CARI dataset varies in detail and accuracy across the state, and represents different time periods for different areas. Users are advised to get familiar with the level of detail available for their area/s of interest to understand the potentially different levels of mapping details represented across their area/s of interest. Future releases of CARI will incorporate updated data sources as they become available. In order for new datasets to be integrated into future releases of CARI, they must meet the minimum standards discussed in the CARI SOP.The vision for CARI is that it will be used by resource agencies, city and county land-use planners, scientists, and other stakeholders as the go-to map to visualize and summarize aquatic resources in their regions for monitoring, and assessment purposes. As more stakeholders use the online wetland monitoring and assessment tools on EcoAtlas, regional interests will improve the map by editing it. EcoAtlas has an online CARI editing tool that allows users to employ the CARI mapping standards and methods to submit suggested updates by submitting direct online edits or by uploading a KML or GIS file. More information on CARI, including definitions, details and methods can be found online at: http://www.sfei.org/CARI.Description of Updates in CARI version 2.2CARI v2.2 further implements the approach first utilized in v1.0 to automate incorporation of the most recent and highest quality data based on available metadata and spatial intersections into CARI for the entirety of the state, rather than just the coastal HUC watersheds updated in v1.0. Furthermore additional work was done to refine the integration of national and regional datasets and crosswalk it to the CARI classification system. Below are listed some of the specific improvements in this latest version of CARI:Integration of the most recent NHD and NWI mapping for the entire stateReview and filtering of Six-County data to remove overlapping mapping and only include data that was more recent and accurate than other available dataImprove the classification and refinement of lake and depression polygons while integrating features from multiple datasets.Address duplicative mapping, overlaps, and edge-effect artifacts from integration of multiple datasetsIntegrated wet meadows dataset provided by UC Davis Integrated individual vernal pools mapped by SFEISalinity classifications for CARI features produced by SFEIDescription of Updates in CARI version 1.0CARI v1.0 represents a significant upgrade to how CARI is compiled. A scripted approach is now employed in order to allow incorporation of the more recent and highest quality regions of different datasets to be identified, using available metadata, and incorporated into CARI. This allows updates to CARI from datasets such as NHD and NWI to be accomplished more easily and quickly. In addition a number of additional datasets are incorporated in order to capture a number of coastal aquatic feature types such as beaches, rocky intertidal, and coastal dunes. For more information please see the CARI SOP which can be found at http://www.sfei.org/CARI. CARI v1.0 was released in September 2022.Description of Updates in CARI version 0.3BAARI v2.1 (2017) Streams, Wetlands and Baylands were integrated into CARIStream data from the Santa Clara Valley Water Districts 2004 Santa Clara Valley Creeks replaced the NHD streams in approximately the Santa Clara County portion of the Pajaro River watershed, including the Pajaro river itself and Llagas, Uvas/Carnadero and Pacheco Creek watersheds. These streams were then classified by SFEI as Natural or Unnatural.CARI v0.3 was released in December 2017Description of Updates in CARI version 0.2Revised streams and wetlands from TARI v2.1(2016) were integrated into the CARI v0.2 dataset. CARI v0.2 was released in May 2016.CARI version 0.1CARI v0 was released in June 2014.Description of Attribute Fields in CARICARI consists of 2 feature classes: Wetlands (polygons) and Streams (lines). The feature attributes serve both to classify the wetland type and to provide information about the source of the data. For more details about attributes, mapping methodology, and the methods of compiling multiple data sources into CARI refer to the CARI SOP available at http://www.sfei.org/CARI.WETLANDSclickcode: an alphanumeric code based on the CARI wetland classification (as presented in Table 1, below).clicklabel: a detailed description of a features wetland type. Clicklabel is the most detailed classification provided by CARI. Original classifications from component datasets (see “orig_class) are translated or "crosswalked” into CARIs classification system. While CARIs component datasets may provide more detail for certain types of wetlands, CARI provides a single statewide classification for wetland types, e.g. "Depressional Perennial Natural Emergent". Major classes within the click label field include: wetlands and (deep) open water. Classes and types include: depressions, playas, estuarine, lacustrine, marine, riverine, lagoon, and slope.name: the name of a particular wetland feature. (e.g. Alpine Lake)orig_dataset: the original source dataset for a feature that was integrated into CARI orig_class: original classification of the wetland in the source dataset. Source datasets (e.g. NWI, BAARI) use different classification systems. The orig_class field preserves that information.organization: the agency or organization that originally mapped the wetland featureorig_dataset_pubyear: The year that the original dataset was publishedprocess_adjustment: Notes indicating how the original dataset was adjusted to fit CARI Standardssource_data: a description of the imagery or other primary data source, including year of collection, from which the wetland feature was identified and mappedsource_estimatedyear: Most recent estimated year of source data from source data fieldorig_scale: Scale that original dataset was digitized at or image scalelegend_headings: In EcoAtlas.org, legend_headings is the value that appears in the legend heading.legcode: a 1-3 letter code signifying the major wetland class, associated with the leglabellevel2 field. Provides less detail than clickcode.leglabellevel1: Common terminology for a features wetland type. In EcoAtlas.org, Leglabellevel1 is the value that appears in the legend, when you click on a particular feature to identify it, and in analyses of wetland areas generated by EcoAtlas Landscape Profile Tool. leglabellevel2: Major classification (less detailed) of the wetland classification provided by the click label field. E.g. "Depressional".major_class: General category that distinguishes open water from wetland areas. Corresponds with the first letter of “clickcode”.wetland_class: More specific wetland classification than major class. Corresponds with the second letter of “clickcode”anthropogenic_modifier: Classification that indicates if the aquatic features physical structure has been significantly impacted by anthropogenic activities. e.g a depressional wetland occurring due to water backing up behind a man made berm or levee. Corresponds with the third letter of “clickcode”wetland_type: Wetland type that provides additional wetland classification speciation in the context of the wetland_class. This wetland classification is consistent with CRAM module types. Corresponds with the fourth letter of “clickcode”wetland_subtype: Wetland type that provides additional wetland classification speciation in the context of the wetland class and wetland types. Corresponds with the fifth letter of “clickcode”tidal_modifier: Indicates tidal influence on an aquatic resource. Corresponds with the sixth letter of “clickcode”vegetation_modifier: Indicates the dominant type of vegetation for an aquatic feature. Corresponds with the seventh and last letter of “clickcode”salinity_modifier: Classification of salinity from six classes: Fresh (less than 0.5 ppt salinity), Oligohaline (0.5-5 ppt), Mesohaline (5-18 ppt), Saline (greater than 18 ppt), Bar-Built (Variable), Undefined.salinity_source: Generalized description of the source data used to assign the salinity modifier.salinity_additional_information: A description of the source data that offers a greater level of detail.lastupdate: the date that the CARI integration script was last run to integrate that featureCARI_id: Unique id for that CARI featureSTREAMSclickcode: an alphanumeric code for the wetland classification (as presented in Table 1, below). clicklabel: a detailed description of a features wetland type. Clicklabel is the most detailed classification provided by CARI. Original classifications from component datasets (see “orig_class”) are translated or "crosswalked” into CARIs classification system. Clicklabel values include: "Fluvial Natural", "Fluvial Unnatural", "Tidal Natural", and "Tidal Unnatural".name: the name of a particular wetland feature. (e.g. Pajaro River)orig_dataset: the original source dataset for a feature that was integrated into CARIorig_class: Original classification of the wetland in the source dataset. Source datasets (e.g. NWI, BAARI) use different classification systems. The orig_class field preserves that information.organization: the agency or organization that originally mapped the wetland featureorig_dataset_pubyear: The year that the original dataset was publishedprocess_adjustment: Notes indicating how the original dataset was adjusted to fit CARI Standardssource_data: a description of the imagery or other primary data source from which the wetland feature was identified and mappedsource_estimatedyear: Most recent estimated year of source data from source data fieldorig_scale: Scale that original dataset was digitized at or image scalelegheader: In EcoAtlas.org, legheader is the value that appears in the legend heading. "Drainage Features" is the only value for legheader.legcode: a 1 or 2 letter code identifying whether the major stream class has tidal influence (TR) or not (R), associated with the leglabel field. Provides less detail than clickcode.leglabel: Common terminology for a features wetland type. In EcoAtlas.org, Leglabel is the value that appears in the legend, when you click on a particular feature to identify it, and in analyses of wetland area generated by EcoAtlas Landscape Profile tool. Leglabel values include:"Fluvial" and "Tidal". major_class: General category that distinguishes open water from wetland areas. Corresponds with the first letter of “clickcode”.CRAM_wetland_type: Wetland type that provides additional wetland classification speciation in the context of the wetland_class. This wetland classification is consistent with CRAM module types. Corresponds with the second letter of “clickcode”anthropogenic_modifiers: Classification that indicates if the aquatic features physical structure has been significantly impacted by anthropogenic activities. e.g a channel that has been straightened through human engineering efforts. Corresponds with the third letter of “clickcode”lastupdate: the date that the CARI integration script was last run to integrate that featureCARI_id: Unique id for that CARI feature

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