177 results

This shapefile shows the EEZ, 200 nautical miles zone of the Gilbert Group - KI. It can be opened in any GIS software.

This is a shapefile layer that shows the 24 nautical miles zone for the Gilbert Group - KI. It can be opened in any GIS software.

This is a shapefile layer that shows the 24 nautical miles zone for Tuvalu. It can be opened in any GIS software.

This is a shapefile layer that shows the 12 nautical miles zone for Tuvalu. It can be opened in any GIS software.

This is a shapefile layer that shows the 200 nautical miles zone for Tuvalu. It can be opened in any GIS software.

This is a shapefile layer that shows the 12 nautical miles zone for the Line Islands - KI. It can be opened in any GIS software.

This shapefile contains the lines that shows the 200 nautical miles for the Pacific only.

This is a link to the website to download the UNEP-WCMC distribution of cold-water corals dataset.

This dataset shows the global distribution of cold-water corals. Occurrence records are given for 86 Families under the subclass Octocorallia (octocorals; also known as Alcyonaria) and four Orders (in Class Anthozoa): Scleractinia (reef-forming corals), Antipatharia (black corals), Zoanthidae (encrusting or button polyps), and Pennatulacea (sea pens). Occurrence records are also available for the order sub-Order Filifera (lace corals) in Class Hydrozoa.

This is a link to the website to download the UNEP-WCMC distribution of corals dataset.

This is a link to the website to download the UNEP-WCMC global patterns of above-ground biomass of mangrove forests.

This is a link to the website to download the distribution of seagrass biome dataset.

This is a MaxEnt model map of the global distribution of the seagrass biome. Species occurrence records were extracted from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), United Nations Environment Programme-World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC) Ocean Data Viewer and Ocean biogeographic information system (OBIS). This map shows the suitable habitats for the seagrass distribution at global scale.

The Open Database License (ODbL) is a license agreement intended to
allow users to freely share, modify, and use this Database while
maintaining this same freedom for others. Many databases are covered by
copyright, and therefore this document licenses these rights. Some
jurisdictions, mainly in the European Union, have specific rights that
cover databases, and so the ODbL addresses these rights, too. Finally,
the ODbL is also an agreement in contract for users of this Database to
act in certain ways in return for accessing this Database.

This is a test on the resource upload under a dataset

steams and water intakes rarotonga 2014 or older