Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .
Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .
Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .
Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .
Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .
Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .
Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .
Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .
Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .
Description: Recreational visitation is measured in terms of Photo-User days. Photo-user days are estimates of the number of unique visitors to a location over a ten year period using photos uploaded to social media. While only a portion of visitors to any given site take and post geotagged photographs and share them on Flickr, the use of photo user days as a proxy for recreational visitation of a site is reasonable given that this data is applied consistently across the entire the Bay Area; therefore, the bias introduced by this indicator is uniform for the region. In ART Bay Area, recreation consequence was aggregated by Priority Conservation Area (PCA), which is an MTC/ABAG tool used to define areas of conservation, but for the Shoreline Flood Explorer we use the same methods to aggregate at the county scale.
All data is in projected coordinate system NAD 1983 UTM Zone 10N. Please refer to the geodatabase metadata for more information. Read more about data sources and methods here: http://www.adaptingtorisingtides.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ARTBayArea_Appendix_Final_March2020_ADA.pdf .
Copyright Text: This work was supported by SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission, Natural Capital Project, AECOM, and Silvestrum.
BCDC (2020). Adapting To Rising Tides Bay Area Ecosystem Services Consequence Analysis; SF Bay [spatial data file]. SF Bay Conservation and Development Commission. Accessed at https://explorer.adaptingtorisingtides.org/download .