Voyage to the bottom of the seabed

The mapping of European seabed habitats goes online!

Image showing the geographic scope for MESH
JNCC has been given the go-ahead to lead an EU Interreg-funded international marine habitat mapping programme. This three year project entitled 'Development of a framework for Mapping European Seabed Habitats', or MESH for short, will start in spring 2004. MESH has 12 partners across the UK, Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium and France, and aims to produce seabed habitat maps for north-west Europe, together with the development of international standards for seabed mapping.

 
Background
Image of rocky reef with Dead Man's Fingers;Alcyonium digitum and calcereous tube worm Pomatoceros spp. © JNCC
Our seas support an exceptionally wide range of habitats and a rich biodiversity.These provide important food resources (fish, shellfish) and yield valuable natural resources (oil, gas, and aggregates). In addition the seabed is subject to increasing pressures from new developments, such as for renewable energy (eg, windfarms) and coastal developments. These ever-growing pressures call for improved sea-use management and planning, which in turn places a substantial demand for information about intertidal and seabed habitats.This has been met by a burgeoning of seabed mapping studies in recent years, but poor co-ordination and a lack of agreed standards has resulted in an inability to provide regional, national and international perspectives on the seabed resource to aid our decision-making. MESH aims to address these key issues, as detailed below.
 
First seabed habitat maps for north-west Europe

 

MESH will compile available seabed habitat mapping information (see map above right for geographical scope) and harmonise it according to European habitat classification schemes (the European Environment Agency's EUNIS system and the EC Habitats Directive types), to provide the first seabed habitat maps for north-west Europe. Because the available information will be of variable quality and patchy in nature, habitat modelling will be developed to predict habitat distribution for unsampled areas, from the more widely available geophysical and hydrographic data.The final maps will be presented with confidence ratings so that end-users can determine their adequacy for their decision-making and future survey effort can be more strategically directed.
 
To improve standards for future mapping programmes and facilitate data exchange and aggregation, MESH will develop a set of internationally agreed protocols and standards for habitat mapping. This will draw upon best available expertise across Europe and elsewhere. The protocols will be tested through a range of field-testing scenarios involving trans-national co-operation to ensure they are robust.
 
Internet delivery and end-user involvement

 

Both the protocols and the habitat maps will be made available via state-of-the-art internet-based Geographical Information Systems (GIS), providing ready access to the information for a wide range of end-users at local, regional, national and international levels.
 
A wide spectrum of end-users will be engaged from the outset to provide feedback, to encourage the supply of relevant data, and to encourage the use of the mapping information for spatial planning, management and environmental protection.
 
The MESH partnership

 

A strong partnership covering all five countries in the Interreg (IIIb) north-west Europe area, brings with it scientific and technical habitat mapping skills, national data collation and management expertise, and experience in the use of habitat mapping in management and regulatory frameworks.The UK partners are JNCC as lead agency, BGS, CEFAS, DARD, English Nature, Envision and the National Museum of Wales.
 
Contact file:
Head of Marine Habitats Team
Tel: +44 (0)1733 866837
Email:
 
 
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