Biotope mapping Gesäuse — Part report mapping area Gstatterstein

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Provided by Bundesministerium für Digitalisierung und Wirtschaftsstandort (BMDW)

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Dataset information

Catalog
Country of origin
Updated
2022.11.07 13:39
Created
2018.03.05
Available languages
German
Keywords
Naturschutz, Biologie, Nationalparks Austria, Schutzgebiet, OpenDocument
Quality scoring
130

Dataset description

The biotope mapping was carried out on a scale of 1:2,000 from a minimum biotope size of 100 m with a minimum biotope width of 5 m. As mapping units, the biotopes were according to the “Red List of Endangered Biotope Types of Austria” (ESSL et al. 2002, 2004 & in Vorb.; Traxler et al. 2005) used. The images were documented in a survey sheet based on the biotope mapping Salzburg (NOWOTNY & Hinterstoisser 1994) and managed in an MS Access database. Biotopes that could be assigned to an endangered biotope type and/or habitat type according to the Habitats Directive (FFH-LRT according to Directive 92/43/EEC) were additionally documented with a list of species. Furthermore, the biotopes were digitally defined to colour orthophotos. 2002, 2004 & in Vorb.; Traxler et al. 2005) used. The images were documented in a survey sheet based on the biotope mapping Salzburg (NOWOTNY & Hinterstoisser 1994) and managed in an MS Access database. Biotopes that could be assigned to an endangered biotope type and/or habitat type according to the Habitats Directive (FFH-LRT according to Directive 92/43/EEC) were additionally documented with a list of species. Furthermore, the biotopes were digitally separated from colour orthophotos. The biotope mapping was carried out on a scale of 1:2,000 from a minimum biotope size of 100 m with a minimum biotope width of 5 m. As mapping units, the biotopes were according to the “Red List of Endangered Biotope Types of Austria” (ESSL et al. 2002, 2004 & in Vorb.; Traxler et al. 2005) used. The biotope mapping was carried out on a scale of 1:2,000 from a minimum biotope size of 100 m with a minimum biotope width of 5 m. As mapping units, the biotopes were according to the “Red List of Endangered Biotope Types of Austria” (ESSL et al. 2002, 2004 & in Vorb.; Traxler et al. 2005) used. The images were documented in a survey sheet based on the biotope mapping Salzburg (NOWOTNY & Hinterstoisser 1994) and managed in an MS Access database. Biotopes that could be assigned to an endangered biotope type and/or habitat type according to the Habitats Directive (FFH-LRT according to Directive 92/43/EEC) were additionally documented with a list of species. Furthermore, the biotopes were digitally demarcated on colour orthophotos.In the Gstatterstein study area, 52 biotopes were mapped, which were detected on 161 individual areas (increased number of individual areas due to vegetation mosaic, especially in the area of the rock fall). The surface sizes of the individual biotopes range from 8 m (rock finders in the mountain fall area) to 13.5 ha (spruce forest on the northern slopes of the Gstatterstein).
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