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Fish Habitat Assessment Output: 5 of 16 High Water Level (75.4m ASL) - Juvenile/Adult Habitat - High Vegetation Association Species (All Thermal Guilds) Habitat suitability was assessed for the Bay of Quinte Area of Concern, at a 3 m grid resolution, using the Habitat Ecosystem Assessment Tool (HEAT), temperature algorithms, vegetation models, and water level input. Habitat classifications were based on three variables: depth (elevation), vegetation, and substrate; and modified by temperature suitabilities. The final suitability maps were based on documented habitat and temperature associations for the fish in the area. Different life stages (spawning requirements, nursery habitat, adult habitat) were modeled for the years of 1972-2011. Suitability values were scaled from 0 (not suitable) to 1 (highly suitable) and converted to suitability classes of very low, low, medium, and high. The final maps for each guild – life stage combination are maximum suitability values from the 39-year period modelled.
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The raster maps depict a suite of forest attributes in 2001* and 2011 at 250 m by 250 m spatial resolution. The maps were produced using the k nearest neighbours method applied to MODIS imagery and trained from National Forest Inventory photo plot data. For detailed information about map production methods please refer to Beaudoin et al. (2018) "Tracking forest attributes across Canada between 2001 and 2011 using the k nearest neighbours mapping approach applied to MODIS imagery." Canadian Journal of Forest Research 48, 85-93. https://cfs.nrcan.gc.ca/publications?id=38979 The map datasets may be downloaded from https://nfi.nfis.org/downloads/nfi_knn2011.zip or https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/ec9e2659-1c29-4ddb-87a2-6aced147a990 * Note: the forest composition (leading tree genus) map depicts forest attributes in 2001. How can this data be used? The resolution and accuracy of these map products are best suited for strategic-level forest reporting and informing policy and decision making at regional to national scales. As these maps also offer a coherent set of quantitative values for a large suite of forest attributes, they can be used as baseline information for modelling and in calculations such as merchantable forest volume or percentage of tree species. It is also possible to overlay these maps with other maps produced on the same pixel grid to make assessments of disturbance impacts, such as fire and harvests.
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Fish Habitat Assessment Output: 15 of 16 Average Water Level (75.0m ASL) - Juvenile/Adult Habitat - Low Vegetation Association Species (Coolwater Guild) Habitat suitability was assessed for the Bay of Quinte Area of Concern, at a 3 m grid resolution, using the Habitat Ecosystem Assessment Tool (HEAT), temperature algorithms, vegetation models, and water level input. Habitat classifications were based on three variables: depth (elevation), vegetation, and substrate; and modified by temperature suitabilities. The final suitability maps were based on documented habitat and temperature associations for the fish in the area. Different life stages (spawning requirements, nursery habitat, adult habitat) were modeled for the years of 1972-2011. Suitability values were scaled from 0 (not suitable) to 1 (highly suitable) and converted to suitability classes of very low, low, medium, and high. The final maps for each guild – life stage combination are maximum suitability values from the 39-year period modelled.
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This dataset provides a Canada-wide map of vegetation height and the delineation of the northern forest limit. It is developed within the framework of Canada’s National Terrestrial Ecosystem Monitoring System (NTEMS). Vegetation height estimates were derived from ICESat-2 LiDAR observations, integrated with Landsat time series and topographic variables to model spatial patterns. The northern forest limit represents the transition between boreal forest and tundra, an ecologically significant zone for monitoring climate change impacts and biodiversity. Vegetation height was modeled for six time-periods including 1985-1995, 1990-2000, 1995-2005, 2000-2010, 2005-2015 and 2010-2021. Predictions for each time period represent the median conditions for that period. Predictions of height and the probability of canopy presence were generated using Random Forests models trained on spaceborne-lidar data collected by ICESat-2 from 2019-2021 and overlapping Landsat satellite imagery from 2010-2021. These Random Forests models were then applied to the entire archive of Landsat imagery, representing a period of ~35 years. This dataset provides spatially explicit prediction of vegetation height (m) along the Canadian northern forest limit at 30 m spatial resolution. Pixels with a low (< 50 %) probability of containing a vegetation canopy have been assigned a height of 0 m. The science and methods for this dataset were the result of a collaboration between the Canadian Forest Service of Natural Resources Canada, partnered with the Integrated Remote Sensing Studio (IRSS) in the Faculty of Forestry at the University of British Columbia. When using this data, please cite: Travers-Smith, H., Coops, N. C., Mulverhill, C., Wulder, M. A., Ignace, D., Lantz, T. C. (2024). Mapping vegetation height and identifying the northern forest limit across Canada using ICESat-2, Landsat time series and topographic data. Remote Sensing of Environment, 305, 114097. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2024.114097 (Travers-Smith et al. 2024). Additional details outlining application of the model to the time-series of Landsat data can be found here: Travers-Smith, H., Coops, N., Mulverhill, C., Wulder, M. A., Lantz, T. C., Ignace, D. (2025). Satellite observations reveal stable forest limits and shrub expansion across the Canadian forest-tundra ecotone. Environmental Research Letters, 20(10). https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/adfc7f (Travers-Smith et al. 2025).
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This dataset provides wall-to-wall maps of forest structure across Canada's 650 million hectare forested ecosystems for the year 2022, generated at a spatial resolution of 30 m. It is developed within the framework of Canada’s National Terrestrial Ecosystem Monitoring System (NTEMS). Structure estimates include key attributes such as canopy height, canopy cover, and aboveground biomass, derived using a combination of airborne lidar and Landsat-based spectral composites. Structure models were trained using the - lidar-plot framework - (Wulder et al. 2012), which integrates co-located airborne lidar data and ground plot measurements with Landsat time-series composites (Hermosilla et al. 2016). A Nearest Neighbour imputation approach was applied to estimate structural attributes across the full extent of Canada's forested area. These nationally consistent products are intended to support strategic-level forest monitoring and assessment and are not designed for operational forest management. For further details on the methods, accuracy assessment, and source data, see Matasci et al. (2018). Matasci, G., Hermosilla, T., Wulder, M.A., White, J.C., Coops, N.C., Hobart, G.W., Bolton, D.K., Tompalski, P., Bater, C.W., 2018. Three decades of forest structural dynamics over Canada's forested ecosystems using Landsat time-series and lidar plots. Remote Sensing of Environment, 216, 697-714. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2018.07.024 (Matasci et al. 2018)
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High-resolution false-color Landsat image composite of Canada's forested ecosystems (2022). This national image product represents the Composite to Change (C2C) proxy composite image derived from thousands of Landsat images acquired between July 1 and August 30, 2022. It is developed within the framework of Canada’s National Terrestrial Ecosystem Monitoring System (NTEMS). The overall process followed is described in (Hermosilla et al. 2016 ) with details on the generation of gap-free surface reflectance composites in ( Hermosilla et al. 2015). Following the motivation and rationale presented in White et al. (White et al. 2014), Landsat imagery is subjected to a series of processing steps to remove clouds and shadows as well as haze and other unwanted atmospheric effects. Year-on-year time series of Landsat imagery are interrogated to avoid missing values, and to ensure exhaustive spatial coverage of the national surface reflectance composites. False-colour 3-channel image (bands: shortwave infrared, SWIR1; near infrared; red) When using these data, please cite as: Hermosilla, T., M.A. Wulder, J.C. White, N.C. Coops, G.W. Hobart, L.B. Campbell, 2016. Mass data processing of time series Landsat imagery: pixels to data products for forest monitoring. International Journal of Digital Earth 9(11), 1035-1054 (Hermosilla et al. 2016 ).
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CanLaBS v2 is an update to the Canada Landsat Burned Severity (CanLaBS) data product, available at https://doi.org/10.23687/b1f61b7e-4ba6-4244-bc79-c1174f2f92cd, builds upon the methodology originally described in Guindon et al. (2021), entitled “Trends in wildfire burn severity across Canada, 1985 to 2015” and published in the Canadian Journal of Forest Research (https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfr-2020-0353). CanLaBS v2 introduces several important improvements to input data sources, temporal coverage, and modeling approaches. **1. Key Updates in CanLaBS v2** **1.1 Transition to Landsat Collection 2** All Landsat inputs used to derive burn severity metrics have been updated from Landsat Collection 1 to Landsat Collection 2 (Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center, 2020a, 2020b, 2020c). Landsat Collection 2 provides improved radiometric calibration, refined atmospheric correction, and enhanced geometric accuracy, resulting in greater temporal consistency and more reliable spectral change detection across sensors and years. **1.2. Expanded fire perimeter coverage (NBAC 1986–2024)** The updated product now covers all fire perimeters included in the National Burn Area Composite (NBAC; Skakun et al., 2022) from 1986 to 2024. This substantially extends the temporal range of the dataset relative to the original release and ensures consistency with the most up-to-date national fire perimeter record used in Canada-wide disturbance analyses. **1.3. Improved random forest model for salvage logging detection** Salvage logging detection has been updated using an improved random forest (RF) classification model trained on 3614 photo-interpreted reference points. The model uses a refined set of spectral predictors derived from Landsat imagery, including pre- and post-fire band 3, post-fire bands 4, 5 and 7 (according to the Landsat 7 nomenclature), inter-annual spectral differences (ΔB3, ΔB4, ΔB5), and pre- and post-fire Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI). Model performance was evaluated using a train-test split (80%, 20%, respectively). This analysis revealed an overall accuracy of 90.6% and Cohen’s kappa of 0.87 (Table 1). Some confusion occurred between low-vegetation fires and salvage logging (the primary class of interest), but overall performance was strong, with 95.49% precision, 75.6% recall, and an F1-score of 84.39%. **Table 1.** Test set confusion matrix of the salvage logging detection random forest model. | Observed / Predicted | No Fire | Fire | Low vegetation fire | Salvage logging | |------------------------------|-----------:|----------:|--------------------------:|-----------------------:| | No Fire | 160 | 1 | 0 | 1 | | Fire | 4 | 148 | 7 | 2 | | Low vegetation fire | 0 | 9 | 220 | 3 | | Salvage logging | 4 | 8 | 29 | 127 | **1.4. Revised gapfilling strategy** As in the original product, gapfilling of pre-fire Landsat data is retained to ensure complete characterization of pre-disturbance conditions. However, post-fire Landsat gapfilling is no longer applied in this version. This results in some missing data but avoids the introduction of uncertainty associated with radiometric regression-based gapfilling. A total of 6.9% of all NBAC burnt pixels are missing data. This proportion decreased over time due to improved Landsat data coverage, from 12.7% for fires before 2000 (pre-Landsat 7) to 2.59% for fires after 2012 (post-Landsat 8 launch). **1.5. Removal of pre-fire forest attribute layers** Pre-fire forest attribute layers (e.g., canopy density, biomass, species composition) are no longer included in this version of CanLaBS. These attributes are now provided through the Spatialized Canadian National Forest Inventory (SCANFI v2; Guindon et al., 2026 ), which offers a more comprehensive, internally consistent, and regularly updated source of pre-disturbance forest information. Users are encouraged to combine CanLaBS with SCANFI v2 (Guindon et al., 2026) for their analyses. Users should use forest attributes from 2 years before the fire to avoid over-smoothed data that artificially underestimate pre-fire forest vegetation when pre-fire year Landsat data are unavailable. The fire start dates can be accessed via NBAC (https://cwfis.cfs.nrcan.gc.ca/datamart). **2. Use limitations** 2.1. This database is not designed to study a single fire or a limited number of fires but rather to study large areas with several fires. No radiometric correction or change was made per fire such as the offset method, or a mean, or median approach for pixels of the same year (see cjfr-2020-0353supplb at https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfr-2020-0353). Even if surface reflectance images were used, there may be radiometric differences within the same fire due to the use of different Landsat scenes. Differences in atmospheric correction between adjacent scenes may therefore be perceptible. The primary reason for not applying additional corrections in these cases is the insufficient number of pixels available per fire during July and August, particularly in certain regions and specific time periods.To achieve a spatially and temporally consistent database, a uniform processing approach was applied to all pixels. These points are discussed in the article and in the supplementary material (see cjfr-2020-0353supplb at https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfr-2020-0353). 2.2. Burnt areas that have undergone salvage logging were detected using a classification approach. This is not an exhaustive mapping of all areas that were salvage logged beyond one year after the fire, the goal was to eliminate these areas from the analyses, as the post-fire values (NBRpost) would be biased by the absence of trees and by the presence of soil disturbed by scarification. 2.3. Fires occurring in forests heavily affected by the mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae), spruce budworm (Choristoneura fumiferana), or other defoliators should ideally be excluded from analyses, as pre-fire NBR values are inherently low, potentially biasing dNBR-based assessments. CanLaD (Perbet et al., 2025) now provides identification of these affected areas (available at https://doi.org/10.23687/902801fd-4d9d-4df4-9e95-319e429545cc). 2.4. The 1985 and 2024 fires represent the beginning and end years of the time series, it is possible that some fires are incomplete for these years, and perhaps to a lesser extent for the 1986 and 2023 fires. **3. Summary** Overall, this update improves the precision and temporal coverage of the CanLaBS data product by leveraging Landsat Collection 2 with updated national fire perimeter polygons and a refined salvage detection method. These changes enhance the suitability of the dataset for national-scale analyses of fire effects, post-fire management, and long-term disturbance dynamics in Canadian forests. **4. Layers description** There are 3 layers: - CanLaBS_1985_2024_v20260121.tif - dNBR values for all burnt pixels according to NBAC - CanLaBS_salvageMask_1985_2024_v20260121.tif - Binary layer where '1' identifies pixels where salvage logging occurred - NBAC_MRB_1972to2024_reproj.tif - NBAC fire year **5. Data download** The data can be downloaded from the FTP server (ftp.maps.canada.ca/pub/nrcan_rncan/Forest-fires_Incendie-de-foret/CanLaBS_v2-Burned_Severity-Severite_des_feux), referenced in the “Data and Resources” section, using a browser download manager, such as DownThemAll, or an external client such as FileZilla. **6. Dataset citation** - Guindon L., Correia D., Perbet P. 2026. Canada Landsat Burned Severity (CanLaBS v2): a Canada-wide Landsat-based 30-m resolution product of burned severity since 1985. https:/doi.org/10.23687/2af751e7-79f9-4da8-9b45-14688818dca3 **7. References** - Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center. 2020a. Landsat 4–5 Thematic Mapper Level-2, Collection 2. Dataset. U.S. Geological Survey. https://doi.org/10.5066/P9IAXOVV - Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center. 2020b. Landsat 7 Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus Level-2, Collection 2. Dataset. U.S. Geological Survey. https://doi.org/10.5066/P9C7I13B - Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center. 2020c. Landsat 8–9 Operational Land Imager / Thermal Infrared Sensor Level-2, Collection 2. Dataset. U.S. Geological Survey. https://doi.org/10.5066/P9OGBGM6 - Guindon, L., S. Gauthier, F. Manka, M. A. Parisien, E. Whitman, P. Bernier, A. Beaudoin, P. Villemaire, and R. Skakun. 2021. “Trends in Wildfire Burn Severity across Canada, 1985 to 2015.” Canadian Journal of Forest Research 51 (9): 1230–1244. https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfr-2020-0353 - Guindon, L., P. Villemaire, D. L. P. Correia, F. Manka, S. Lacarte, and B. Smiley. 2023. SCANFI: Spatialized CAnadian National Forest Inventory Data Product. Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Laurentian Forestry Centre, Quebec, Canada. https://doi.org/10.23687/18e6a919-53fd-41ce-b4e2-44a9707c52dc - Guindon, L., D. L. P. Correia, F. Manka, and B. Smiley. 2026. SCANFI v2: Spatialized Canadian National Forest Inventory Data Product. Quebec, Canada: Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Laurentian Forestry Centre. https://doi.org/10.23687/07653869-f303-46c2-a04e-9ab479b73cbf - Perbet, P., L. Guindon, D. L. P. Correia, et al. 2025. “Historical Insect Disturbance Maps from 1985 Onwards for Canadian Forests Derived Using Earth Observation Data.” Scientific Data 12: 2012. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-025-06269-x - Perbet, P., L. Guindon, D. L. P. Correia, P. Villemaire, O. Reisi Gahrouei, and R. St-Amant. Canada Landsat Disturbance with Pest (CanLaD): A Canada-Wide Landsat-Based 30-m Resolution Product of Fire, Harvest and Pest Outbreak Detection and Attribution since 1987. https://doi.org/10.23687/902801fd-4d9d-4df4-9e95-319e429545cc - Skakun, R., G. Castilla, J. Metsaranta, E. Whitman, S. Rodrigue, J. Little, K. Groenewegen, and M. Coyle. 2022. “Extending the National Burned Area Composite Time Series of Wildfires in Canada.” Remote Sensing 14 (13): 3050.
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Forest Gross Stem Volume 2015 Gross stem volume. It is developed within the framework of Canada’s National Terrestrial Ecosystem Monitoring System (NTEMS). Individual tree gross volumes are calculated using species-specific allometric equations. In the measured ground plots, gross total volume per hectare is calculated by summing the gross total volume of all trees and dividing by the area of the plot (units = m3/ha). Products relating the structure of Canada's forested ecosystems have been generated and made openly accessible. The shared products are based upon peer-reviewed science and relate aspects of forest structure including: (i) metrics calculated directly from the lidar point cloud with heights normalized to heights above the ground surface (e.g., canopy cover, height), and (ii) modelled inventory attributes, derived using an area-based approach generated by using co-located ground plot and ALS data (e.g., volume, biomass). Forest structure estimates were generated by combining information from lidar plots (Wulder et al. 2012) with Landsat pixel-based composites (White et al. 2014; Hermosilla et al. 2016) using a nearest neighbour imputation approach with a Random Forests-based distance metric. These products were generated for strategic-level forest monitoring information needs and are not intended to support operational-level forest management. All products have a spatial resolution of 30 m. For a detailed description of the data, methods applied, and accuracy assessment results see Matasci et al. (2018). When using this data, please cite as follows: Matasci, G., Hermosilla, T., Wulder, M.A., White, J.C., Coops, N.C., Hobart, G.W., Bolton, D.K., Tompalski, P., Bater, C.W., 2018b. Three decades of forest structural dynamics over Canada's forested ecosystems using Landsat time-series and lidar plots. Remote Sensing of Environment 216, 697-714. Matasci et al. 2018) Geographic extent: Canada's forested ecosystems (~ 650 Mha) Time period: 1985–2011
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Fish Habitat Assessment Output: 9 of 16 Average Water Level (75.0m ASL) - Spawning Habitat - High Vegetation Association Species (All Temperature Windows) Habitat suitability was assessed for the Bay of Quinte Area of Concern, at a 3 m grid resolution, using the Habitat Ecosystem Assessment Tool (HEAT), temperature algorithms, vegetation models, and water level input. Habitat classifications were based on three variables: depth (elevation), vegetation, and substrate; and modified by temperature suitabilities. The final suitability maps were based on documented habitat and temperature associations for the fish in the area. Different life stages (spawning requirements, nursery habitat, adult habitat) were modeled for the years of 1972-2011. Suitability values were scaled from 0 (not suitable) to 1 (highly suitable) and converted to suitability classes of very low, low, medium, and high. The final maps for each guild – life stage combination are maximum suitability values from the 39-year period modelled.
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The probability of effective growing season degree days above 250 for warm season crops. This condition must be maintained for at least 5 consecutive days in order for EGDD to be accumulated (egdd_warm_250prob). La probabilité prévue pour les semaines 1 et 2 est disponible tous les jours du 1er avril au 31 octobre. La probabilité prévue pour les semaines 3 et 4 est disponible toutes les semaines (jeudi) du 1er avril au 31 octobre. Cumulative heat-energy satisfies the essential requirement of field crop growth and development towards a high yield and good quality of agricultural crop products. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) and Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) have together developed a suite of extreme agrometeorological indices based on four main categories of weather factors: temperature, precipitation, heat, and wind. The extreme weather indices are intended as short-term prediction tools and generated using ECCC’s medium range forecasts to create a weekly index product on a daily and weekly basis.
Arctic SDI catalogue