National dataset of Australia's Ramsar Wetlands. The Convention on Wetlands of International Importance (the Ramsar Convention) was signed in Ramsar, Iran on 2 February 1971. The Ramsar Convention aims to halt the worldwide loss of wetlands and to conserve, through wise use and management, those that remain. The Convention encourages member countries to nominate sites containing representative, rare or unique wetlands, or that are important for conserving biological diversity, to the List of Wetlands of International Importance (Ramsar sites). Australia was one of the first countries to become a Contracting Party to the Convention and designated the world's first Ramsar site, Cobourg Peninsula, in 1974. This project was initiated by the Wetlands Section of the Australian Government Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. Spatial data was sourced from the relevant State and Territory agencies and compiled into a single national coverage.
L o a d i n g
OverviewWATERWATER LakesWATER Lakes_ConservationWATER Wetlands_ConservationWATER Wetlands_InventoryWATER_Inventory
Additional Information
KeyValue
dcat_issued2023-06-18T13:21:53.000Z
dcat_modified2024-04-11T02:02:28.183Z
dcat_publisher_nameAustralian Government Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water
guidhttps://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=70f25570514d44bf9246ac7fa9c4c200&sublayer=0
language
harvest_object_idb26340e6-cc63-4ccd-a8c3-921c386ced5e
harvest_source_idb4a641fd-7000-437a-b9f4-322aa6e83b11
harvest_source_titleAustralian Marine Spatial Information System (AMSIS)