Environment and Climate Change Canada

4 datasets found
  • Open Data

    Tributary Benthic Invertebrates, Oil Sands Region

    Tributary Biomonitoring (Lower Athabasca River) Benthic macroinvertebrates, comprising insects, crusteaceans, molluscs and worms, represent a group of organisms used widely in environmental monitoring programs as early warning indicators to assess the effects of change in water quality...
    Organization:
    Environment and Climate Change Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • PDF
    • CSV
    • HTML
    • XML
  • Open Data

    Canadian National Tornado Database: Verified Events (1980-2009) - Public

    A database of verified tornado occurrences across Canada has been created covering the 30-year period from 1980 to 2009. The data are stored in a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet, including fields for date, time, location, Fujita Rating (intensity), path information, fatalities, injuries, and damage...
    Organization:
    Environment and Climate Change Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • PNG
    • KML
    • XLS
    • PDF
    • HTML
  • Open Data

    Benthic Invertebrates, Oil Sands Region

    Benthic invertebrates monitoring includes both lotic (rivers/streams) and lentic (wetlands) ecosystems. Aquatic biomonitoring provides a direct measure of change in biotic populations and communities in relation to benchmark or reference conditions and can help identify the ecological effects of...
    Organization:
    Environment and Climate Change Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • PDF
    • HTML
    • ESRI REST
    • WMS
  • Open Data

    Deltaic Ecosystem Health, Oil Sands Region

    Deltaic Wetlands Biomonitoring Wetland macroinvertebrates, comprising insects, crustaceans, molluscs and worms represent a group of organisms forming a critical food resource for consumer organisms (e.g. fish, birds), that are used widely in environmental monitoring programs to assess both the...
    Organization:
    Environment and Climate Change Canada
    Resource Formats:
    • CSV
    • PDF
    • XLS
    • HTML