Aquatic Species Richness

Aquatic native species richness is a measure of species biodiversity, and is one measurement used to describe the distribution of overall species biodiversity in California for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) Areas of Conservation Emphasis Project (ACE). Native species richness represents a count of the total number of native aquatic species potentially present in each watershed based on species range and distribution information. The data can be used to view patterns of species diversity, and to identify areas of highest native richness across the state. The species count consists of four taxonomic groups '€“ fish, aquatic invertebrates, aquatic amphibians, and aquatic reptiles.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Version Version 5.0
Last Updated March 28, 2025, 08:35 (UTC)
Created March 7, 2025, 07:52 (UTC)
category /Wetland Integrity/Composition
collection_name California Landscape Metrics
creation_method For more information, see the Aquatic Native Species Richness Factsheet (2018) at <https://nrm.dfg.ca.gov/FileHandler.ashx?DocumentID=150852> The California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) Areas of Conservation Emphasis (ACE) is a compilation and analysis of the best-available statewide spatial information in California on biodiversity, rarity and endemism, harvested species, significant habitats, connectivity and wildlife movement, climate vulnerability, climate refugia, and other relevant data (e.g., other conservation priorities such as those identified in the State Wildlife Action Plan (SWAP), stressors, land ownership). ACE addresses both terrestrial and aquatic data.
data_units Count
data_vintage 02/2018
date_updated August 2024
element Composition
encoding utf8
file_name AquaticSpecRichness_201802_202209_T1_v5
format GeoTiff
harvest_object_id 8735e111-a59d-44f0-9983-fae70f863638
harvest_source_id a2637971-af12-457f-ae4a-831d2202a539
harvest_source_title WIFIRE Commons
maximum_value 117.0
metric_definition_and_relevance Aquatic native species richness is a measure of species biodiversity, and is one measurement used to describe the distribution of overall species biodiversity in California for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) Areas of Conservation Emphasis Project (ACE). Native species richness represents a count of the total number of native aquatic species potentially present in each watershed based on species range and distribution information. The data can be used to view patterns of species diversity, and to identify areas of highest native richness across the state. The species count consists of four taxonomic groups '€“ fish, aquatic invertebrates, aquatic amphibians, and aquatic reptiles.
minimum_value 0.0
pillar Wetland Integrity
spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[-124.5090833859125, 32.4242698701859], [-113.49380570277376, 32.4242698701859], [-113.49380570277376, 42.1119747450123], [-124.5090833859125, 42.1119747450123], [-124.5090833859125, 32.4242698701859]]]}
tier 1