@globalfishingwatch/i18n-labels 1.2.299 → 1.3.1

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@@ -82,11 +82,27 @@
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  },
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  "private-bra-onyxsat-vessel-identity-fishing": {
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  "name": "VMS Brazil (Fishing Vessels)",
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- "description": "Fishing Vessels (VMS Brazil)"
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+ "description": "Fishing Vessels (VMS Brazil)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "selfReportedInfo.codMarinha": {
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+ "keyword": "codMarinha"
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+ },
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+ "selfReportedInfo.targetSpecies": {
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+ "keyword": "targetSpecies"
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+ }
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+ }
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  },
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  "private-bra-onyxsat-vessel-identity-non-fishing": {
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  "name": "VMS Brazil (Non Fishing Vessels)",
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- "description": "Non Fishing Vessels (VMS Brazil)"
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+ "description": "Non Fishing Vessels (VMS Brazil)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "selfReportedInfo.codMarinha": {
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+ "keyword": "codMarinha"
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+ },
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+ "selfReportedInfo.targetSpecies": {
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+ "keyword": "targetSpecies"
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+ }
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+ }
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  },
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  "private-brazil-opentuna-presence": {
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  "name": "Brazil VMS",
@@ -148,6 +164,9 @@
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  "48": "48"
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  }
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  },
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+ "is_closed": {
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+ "keyword": "is_closed"
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+ },
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  "start_distance_from_port_trunc": {
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  "keyword": "start_distance_from_port_trunc",
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  "enum": {
@@ -172,6 +191,25 @@
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  }
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  }
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  },
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+ "private-global-planet-footprints": {
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+ "name": "Planet footprints",
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+ "description": "Planet footprints"
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+ },
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+ "private-global-planet-presence": {
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+ "name": "Planet Imagery detections (Optical)",
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+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <p> This layer shows vessels detected using optical satellite imagery collected by the European Space Agency's Planet satellites. Optical imagery is similar to high-quality aerial photography from space, using reflected sunlight in visible and near-infrared wavelengths. This type of imagery provides high-resolution detail that allows us to spot small vessels, identify wake patterns, and better understand activity near shore. </p> <p> Global Fishing Watch uses a machine learning model that processes each image to identify vessels and estimate their length, orientation, and speed based on wake features. The detections are then filtered using a secondary classifier to remove objects that are not vessels, such as clouds, rocks or icebergs. Each detection is linked to a cropped image (a thumbnail) so users can visually inspect what the model identified. </p> <p> Because optical satellites rely on sunlight and clear skies, detections are only possible during the day and when the area is not obscured by clouds or haze. Despite these limitations, detections with optical imagery are especially helpful in identifying small untracked vessels that may not appear in other tracking systems. </p> <h2>Use cases</h2> <ul> <li> Monitor vessel presence (both fishing and non-fishing) in areas of interest such as marine protected areas (MPAs), exclusive economic zones (EEZs), inshore exclusion zones (IEZs) and Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs). In some cases, activity like bottom trawling can be seen through disturbance to seabed sediment. </li> <li> Assess presence of vessels that don't show up on cooperative tracking systems—including automatic identification system (AIS) and vessel monitoring system (VMS)—near vulnerable marine ecosystems and essential fish habitats. </li> <li> Goes beyond vessel detection in other satellite remote sensors like Sentinel-1 SAR and VIIRS which simply detect the presence of an object, with Planet users can often infer the object's activity based on the wake of a detection, and in some cases, the dataset can be used to identify fishing activity e.g. sediment plumes of trawlers, net encircling fish in purse seine vessels. </li> <li> Support analyses on small-scale fishing. While the 10m resolution is still too coarse to comprehensively map small-scale fishing, Planet detections have been integrated into multiple analyses related to regional small-scale fishery and demonstrated the potential as a valuable addition to the limited vessel tracking data. </li> </ul> <h2>Limitations</h2> <ul> <li> Vessel detection with optical imagery requires daylight and clear skies <ul> <li> Unlike radar, optical satellites cannot see through clouds, fog, or haze. Detections are only possible during daylight hours when the view is unobstructed. </li> </ul> </li> <li> Not all geographies are covered equally <ul> <li> Planet coverage is mostly limited to coastal waters. It revisits most areas every five days, but the image availability depends on the weather. Cloudy or hazy regions have lower effective revisit frequencies than regions with better weather conditions. </li> </ul> </li> <li> The detections may include false positives <ul> <li> Despite post-processing, the model may still produce occasional false detections—e.g., picking up buoys, debris, fixed infrastructure, or image artifacts. These false positives are reduced using a secondary classifier, but not completely eliminated. </li> </ul> </li> <li> Uncertainty in some vessel features <ul> <li> Smaller or slower-moving vessels may not produce visible wakes, making it more difficult to estimate their speed or heading. Therefore, these values may be inaccurate for small boats. </li> </ul> </li> <li> Not all detections unmatched to AIS are untracked vessels <ul> <li> The detections include both vessels on AIS and untracked vessels. We try to match detections to AIS tracks, but sometimes matching is not feasible due to large time gaps between AIS positions and in areas with high density of detections. </li> </ul> </li> </ul> <h2>Methods</h2> <h3>Optical imagery</h3> <p> This layer is based on images from the Planet satellites operated by the European Space Agency (ESA). These satellites capture medium-resolution images (10 m per pixel) of the ocean using visible and near-infrared light (among several other bands). Combined, the satellites acquire images of most coastal waters and dedicated areas in the open ocean roughly every five days, and the imagery is made freely available by the ESA. </p> <h3>Image processing and selection</h3> <p> We use pre-processed Planet images that have been corrected for geometric distortions and aligned to the Earth's surface. These images are split into manageable tiles, and we selected the tiles that cover only ocean areas (image tiles over land are excluded). We use four image bands: red, green, blue (RGB), and near-infrared (NIR), all at 10-meter resolution. These bands give us the detail and contrast needed to detect and classify vessels. </p> <h3>Vessel detection</h3> <p> Our machine learning model scans each image tile to detect vessels. It is trained to look for features such as the shape, brightness, and wake of a vessel. When it finds a likely candidate, the model predicts a score for vessel presence alongside estimates of the vessel's location, size, orientation, and speed. </p> <p> The detection model was trained on over 11,000 manually reviewed vessel examples across thousands of Planet scenes. This training process included many small vessels and scenes from around the world, helping the model to perform well across different environments and vessel types. </p> <h3>Image thumbnails</h3> <p> Each detection includes a small visual \"chip\" showing the detected vessel at the center. These thumbnails come in two formats: a color version from the RGB bands, and a grayscale version from the near-infrared band. Each chip covers an area of 1 km². These thumbnails are helpful for visually confirming a detection or understanding its context. For very small vessels (under 15 meters), it may still be difficult to see them clearly. </p> <h3>Reducing false positives</h3> <p> Not everything that looks like a vessel in satellite imagery actually is one. To help remove false detections (like buoys, offshore platforms, sea ice, or clouds), we run each detection through a secondary classifier. This classifier is a machine learning model that uses both the image thumbnail and additional information about the detection (such as distance from shore, local depth, and vessel density nearby, among others) to decide whether the object is likely to be a vessel. We also flag detections that are close to known fixed infrastructure or in areas with substantial sea ice or iceberg presence. </p> <p> If a detection is classified as likely non-vessel or flagged as potential infrastructure or ice, we remove it from the map layer so only high-confidence detections are included. We also clip the satellite footprints (displayed on the map layer) to exclude the areas under the icy-region mask. However, we provide all the false positives with labels through the data download portal for stakeholders who require a more complete dataset. </p> <h3>AIS matching and vessel identity</h3> <p> AIS data can reveal the identity of vessels, their owners and corporations, and fishing activity. Not all vessels, however, are required to use AIS devices, as regulations vary by country, vessel size, and activity. Vessels engaged in illicit activities can also turn off their AIS transponders or manipulate the locations they broadcast. Also, large \"blind spots\" along coastal waters arise from nations that restrict access to AIS data that are captured by terrestrial receptors instead of satellites or from poor reception due to high vessel density and low-quality AIS devices. Unmatched imagery detections therefore provide the missing information about vessel traffic in the ocean. </p> <p> Matching imagery detections to vessels' GPS coordinates from AIS is challenging because the timestamps of the images and AIS records do not coincide, and a single AIS identity can potentially match to multiple vessels appearing in the image, and vice versa. To determine the likelihood that a vessel broadcasting AIS corresponded to a specific detection, we developed a matching approach based on probability rasters of where a vessel is likely to be minutes before and after an AIS position was recorded. These rasters were produced from one year of global AIS data from the Global Fishing Watch pipeline, which sources satellite data from Spire Global and Orbcomm. The probability rasters are based on roughly 10 billion vessel positions and are computed for six different vessel classes, considering six different speeds and 36 time intervals. So we obtain the likely position of a vessel that could match a detection based on the vessel class, speed and time interval. In addition to the spatiotemporal matching, we factor in the similarity between the model-inferred vessel length and the length from AIS identity data to avoid (likely incorrect) matches with large discrepancies in size, e.g., AIS of a tugboat and the detection of a large vessel behind it. </p> <h3>Detection footprints</h3> <p> To help users understand where detections were possible, we show the detection \"footprints\" on the map. These polygons are the portions of the satellite images that cover the ocean and that were used for detection. Thus, if you see a footprint but no detections, it means no vessels were detected in that area. If there is no footprint, no image was processed for that location and time. </p> <h3>Automation and updates</h3> <p> Our detection and matching system runs automatically each day. It checks for new Planet images published to Google Cloud and processes those that meet our quality criteria. New detections are typically available within 1–2 days of the satellite capturing the image. The automated pipeline also re-checks any images published late to ensure any data gaps are filled. </p> <h2>Source data and citations</h2> <p> All vessel data are freely available through the Global Fishing Watch data portal at <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" href=\"https://globalfishingwatch.org/data-download/\" >https://globalfishingwatch.org/data-download/</a >. </p> <h2>License</h2> <p> Non-Commercial Use Only. The Site and the Services are provided for Non-Commercial use only in accordance with the CC BY-NC 4.0 license. If you would like to use the Site and/or the Services for commercial purposes, please contact us. </p>",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "length": {
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+ "keyword": "length"
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+ },
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+ "matched": {
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+ "keyword": "matched"
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+ },
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+ "shiptype": {
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+ "keyword": "shiptype"
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+ }
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+ }
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+ },
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  "private-indonesia-aruna-fishing-effort": {
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  "name": "Aruna: Indonesia Pelagic",
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  "description": "Indonesia Aruna Fishing Effort"
@@ -256,11 +294,33 @@
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  },
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  "private-panama-vessel-identity-fishing": {
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  "name": "Panama Private VMS (Private Fishing Vessels)",
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- "description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Private)"
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+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Private)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
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+ "keyword": "imo"
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+ },
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+ "selfReportedInfo.nationalRegisterNumber": {
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+ "keyword": "nationalRegisterNumber"
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+ },
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+ "selfReportedInfo.ssvid": {
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+ "keyword": "ssvid"
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+ }
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+ }
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  },
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  "private-panama-vessel-identity-non-fishing": {
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  "name": "Panama Private VMS (Private Non Fishing Vessels)",
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- "description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Private)"
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+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Private)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
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+ "keyword": "imo"
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+ },
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+ "selfReportedInfo.nationalRegisterNumber": {
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+ "keyword": "nationalRegisterNumber"
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+ },
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+ "selfReportedInfo.ssvid": {
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+ "keyword": "ssvid"
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+ }
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+ }
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  },
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  "private-peru-fishing-effort": {
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  "name": "Apparent Fishing Effort Peru VMS",
@@ -308,21 +368,17 @@
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  },
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  "private-peru-vessel-identity-fishing": {
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  "name": "Private Peru VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
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- "description": "Dataset for VMS Peru (Private)"
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- },
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- "private-png-fishing-effort": {
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- "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
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- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
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+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Peru (Private)",
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  "schema": {
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- "flag": {
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- "keyword": "flag",
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- "enum": {
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- "PNG": "PNG",
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- "PHL": "PHL"
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- }
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+ "selfReportedInfo.nationalId": {
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+ "keyword": "nationalId"
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  }
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  }
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  },
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+ "private-png-fishing-effort": {
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+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
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+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques"
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+ },
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  "private-png-fishing-identity-vessels": {
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  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
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  "description": "Dataset for VMS Papua New Guinea (Private)"
@@ -610,6 +666,57 @@
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  "Tainha": "Tainha",
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  "Vermelhos (especificar)": "Vermelhos (especificar)"
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  }
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+ },
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+ "fleet_code": {
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+ "keyword": "fleet_code",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "1.1": "1.1",
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+ "1.10": "1.10",
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+ "1.12": "1.12",
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+ "1.13": "1.13",
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+ "1.14": "1.14",
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+ "1.17": "1.17",
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+ "1.18": "1.18",
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+ "1.2": "1.2",
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+ "1.3": "1.3",
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+ "1.4": "1.4",
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+ "1.5": "1.5",
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+ "1.6": "1.6",
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+ "1.7": "1.7",
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+ "1.8": "1.8",
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+ "1.9": "1.9",
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+ "2.10": "2.10",
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+ "2.11": "2.11",
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+ "2.13": "2.13",
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+ "2.2": "2.2",
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+ "2.3": "2.3",
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+ "2.4": "2.4",
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+ "2.5": "2.5",
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+ "3.1": "3.1",
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+ "3.10": "3.10",
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+ "3.11": "3.11",
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+ "3.12": "3.12",
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+ "3.13": "3.13",
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+ "3.2": "3.2",
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+ "3.3": "3.3",
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+ "3.5": "3.5",
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+ "3.6": "3.6",
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+ "3.9": "3.9",
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+ "4.1": "4.1",
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+ "4.2": "4.2",
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+ "4.3": "4.3",
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+ "4.4": "4.4",
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+ "4.6": "4.6",
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+ "5.1": "5.1",
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+ "5.10": "5.10",
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+ "5.11": "5.11",
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+ "5.2": "5.2",
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+ "5.3": "5.3",
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+ "5.4": "5.4",
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+ "5.6": "5.6",
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+ "5.9": "5.9",
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+ "Sem código IN": "Sem código IN"
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+ }
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  }
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  }
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  },
@@ -677,7 +784,7 @@
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  "keyword": "duration",
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  "enum": {
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  "0": "0",
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- "49": "49"
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+ "48": "48"
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  }
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  },
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  "type": {
@@ -728,7 +835,66 @@
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  },
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  "private-vms-bra-vessel-identity": {
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  "name": "VMS Brazil",
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- "description": "Vessels (VMS Brazil)"
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+ "description": "Vessels (VMS Brazil)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "selfReportedInfo.fishingLicenseCode": {
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+ "keyword": "fishingLicenseCode"
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+ },
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+ "selfReportedInfo.fleetCode": {
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+ "keyword": "fleetCode",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "1.1": "1.1",
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+ "1.10": "1.10",
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+ "1.12": "1.12",
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+ "1.13": "1.13",
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+ "1.14": "1.14",
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+ "1.17": "1.17",
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+ "1.18": "1.18",
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+ "1.2": "1.2",
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+ "1.3": "1.3",
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+ "1.4": "1.4",
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+ "1.5": "1.5",
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+ "1.6": "1.6",
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+ "1.7": "1.7",
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+ "1.8": "1.8",
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+ "1.9": "1.9",
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+ "2.10": "2.10",
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+ "2.11": "2.11",
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+ "2.13": "2.13",
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+ "2.2": "2.2",
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+ "2.3": "2.3",
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+ "2.4": "2.4",
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+ "2.5": "2.5",
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+ "3.1": "3.1",
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+ "3.10": "3.10",
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+ "3.11": "3.11",
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+ "3.12": "3.12",
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+ "3.13": "3.13",
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+ "3.2": "3.2",
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+ "3.3": "3.3",
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+ "3.5": "3.5",
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+ "3.6": "3.6",
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+ "3.9": "3.9",
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+ "4.1": "4.1",
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+ "4.2": "4.2",
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+ "4.3": "4.3",
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+ "4.4": "4.4",
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+ "4.6": "4.6",
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+ "5.1": "5.1",
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+ "5.10": "5.10",
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+ "5.11": "5.11",
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+ "5.2": "5.2",
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+ "5.3": "5.3",
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+ "5.4": "5.4",
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+ "5.6": "5.6",
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+ "5.9": "5.9",
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+ "Sem código IN": "Sem código IN"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "selfReportedInfo.vesselRegistrationCode": {
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+ "keyword": "vesselRegistrationCode"
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+ }
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+ }
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  },
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  "private-vms-chl-encounters-events": {
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  "name": "Encounter Events. (CHL)",
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  "source_fleet": {
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  "keyword": "source_fleet",
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  "enum": {
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- "SMALL_FISHERIES": "SMALL_FISHERIES",
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- "INDUSTRY": "INDUSTRY"
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+ "INDUSTRY": "INDUSTRY",
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+ "SMALL_FISHERIES": "SMALL_FISHERIES"
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  }
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  }
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  }
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  "source_fleet": {
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  "keyword": "source_fleet",
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  "enum": {
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- "SMALL_FISHERIES": "SMALL_FISHERIES",
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+ "AQUACULTURE": "AQUACULTURE",
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  "INDUSTRY": "INDUSTRY",
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- "TRANSPORT": "TRANSPORT",
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- "AQUACULTURE": "AQUACULTURE"
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+ "SMALL_FISHERIES": "SMALL_FISHERIES",
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+ "TRANSPORT": "TRANSPORT"
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  }
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  },
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  "speed": {
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  },
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  "private-vms-cri-encounters-events": {
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  "name": "Encounter Events. (CRI)",
883
- "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <h3> Encounter events identify instances where two vessels appear to meet at sea. </h3> <ul> <p> Global Fishing Watch classifies an event as an encounter when two vessels are detected: </p> <li>Within 500 meters of one another</li> <li>For a duration of at least 2 hours</li> <li>Traveling at a median speed of less than 2 knots</li> <li> And located at least 10 kilometers (5.4 nautical miles) from a coastal anchorage. </li> </ul> <ul> <p> Users can filter encounter events by vessel characteristics and context, including: </p> <li>Duration of encounter</li> <li> Vessel flag - Shows encounters where at least one vessel is flagged to the selected country </li> <li> Next port visit after the encounter - Shows encounters where at least one vessel is has visited the selected port(s) </li> <li>Vessel types involved in the encounter</li> <li>User saved vessel group</li> </ul> <ul> <p>Currently displayed encounter types include:</p> <li>Carrier ⇄ Bunker (experimental)</li> <li>Carrier Fishing</li> <li>Fishing Bunker (experimental)</li> <li>Fishing Fishing (experimental)</li> <li>Support Fishing</li> </ul> <p> To view more details about a specific encounter—such as its location or the identity of the encountered vessel—click the “See more” icon associated with the event. </p> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> Global Fishing Watch events are the result of rule-based algorithms being applied to AIS positional data. There are many potential reasons for vessels to meet at sea. Such interactions may include transshipment of catch or supplies, equipment transfers, crew changes, safety-related matters, and more. Encounter data should therefore be viewed as an indicator for review. </li> <li> Encounters that do not meet the specifications of GFW encounter events described above are not included in the map, such as encounters less than two hours and in-port encounters. </li> <li> Encounters between the same two vessels occurring within a 4-hour window are consolidated into a single encounter event. While multiple encounters within such a short timeframe are possible, they remain exceptionally rare. </li> <li> The 500-meter proximity threshold is calculated using implied positions—not raw AIS messages. Since AIS transmissions occur at irregular intervals, vessel positions are estimated by a 10-minute time grid using reported course and speed. Proximity is then calculated based on these estimated positions. Due to this modeling approach, it is possible that vessels identified in an encounter may not have been physically within 500 meters of each other for the entire 2-hour period. </li> <li> Bias in vessel identification and gear classification can result in the unexpected presence or absence of an encounter. Misclassifications in vessel type may occur due to inconsistent or incomplete vessel registry data. Misclassifications can also happen when algorithms struggle to appropriately categorize vessels, for instance, where vessels use several gears (thus changing their behavioral patterns) or when a vessel’s MMSI (maritime mobile service identity) number is used by more than one vessel. </li> <li> An encounter event position may not align exactly with the vessels' tracks. Global Fishing Watch determines a single location for each event by calculating the average latitude and longitude of all positions within the event. As a result it is possible the vessels never occupied that precise location during the encounter event. </li> <li> Global Fishing Watch recommends to visually inspect vessel tracks, always refer to additional data source and/or information, and request records from a vessel to confirm any findings, as part of the users due diligence process. </li> </ul> <h2>Learn more</h2> <p> You can read more about transshipment behaviour from our <a href=\"http://globalfishingwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/GlobalViewOfTransshipment_Aug2017.pdf\" >report</a > or <a href=\"https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2018.00240/full\" >scientific publication</a >. </p>",
1049
+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <p> Encounter events identify instances where two vessels appear to meet at sea. Our VMS Encounter dataset is currently experimental, and we calculate these events across all VMS sources. Because VMS predominantly tracks fishing vessels, encounters in this dataset are more likely to reflect fishing-related activity - such as pair fishing - than transshipment-related activity, which is more commonly observed in AIS data. </p> <p> Global Fishing Watch classifies an event as an encounter when two vessels are detected: </p> <ul> <li>Within 500 meters of one another</li> <li>For a duration of at least 2 hours</li> <li>Traveling at a median speed of less than 2 knots</li> <li> And located at least 10 kilometers (5.4 nautical miles) from a coastal anchorage </li> </ul> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> When encounter events involve a vessel in a foreign VMS source, the foreign vessel will appear as anonymous due to MOU restrictions. Specifically, we only display the flag and vessel type for the foreign vessel and hide the rest of its identity fields, so the vessel name appears as “Unknown” on the map. </li> <li> Because VMS datasets consist predominantly of fishing vessels - unlike AIS, which captures a broader range of vessel types - encounter events are more likely to represent pair fishing activity than transshipment. As with all Global Fishing Watch encounter data, these events are derived from rule-based algorithms and may reflect a wide range of at-sea interactions, so they should not be taken as evidence of any specific activity without further investigation. </li> <li> Some vessels appear in multiple VMS sources simultaneously due to country regulations, which can cause a vessel to appear to encounter itself. To reduce this noise, we have applied a filter that removes encounters between vessels sharing the same name across different VMS sources, though this is not a perfect solution and we are continuing to work on improvements. </li> <li> Encounters between the same two vessels occurring within a 4-hour window are consolidated into a single encounter event. Note that the 10 km anchorage-distance filter is applied before this merging step, so in rare cases a merged encounter’s average location may fall within 10 km of an anchorage even though each underlying (pre-merge) encounter was more than 10 km from the nearest anchorage. </li> <li> It is a known issue that the encounter detection algorithm does not evaluate continuity across the day boundary (midnight UTC). As a result, encounters that span midnight are not detected and will be missing from the dataset. Specifically those that start after ~22:00 UTC or end before ~02:00 UTC. </li> <li> Encounter detection relies on first creating a regular 10-minute timeline of a vessel’s positions. This timeline is created by interpolating between consecutive positions only when they are less than 60 minutes apart. If a vessel’s polling rate is 60 minutes or longer, no interpolation is performed, so encounters for that vessel are less likely to be detected and may be missed. </li> <li> An encounter event position may not align exactly with the vessels' tracks. Global Fishing Watch determines a single location for each event by calculating the average latitude and longitude of all positions within the event. </li> <li> Global Fishing Watch recommends visually inspecting vessel tracks, always referring to additional data sources and/or information, and requesting records from a vessel to confirm any findings, as part of the users' due diligence process. </li> </ul>",
884
1050
  "schema": {
885
1051
  "duration": {
886
1052
  "keyword": "duration",
@@ -918,16 +1084,16 @@
918
1084
  "source_fleet": {
919
1085
  "keyword": "source_fleet",
920
1086
  "enum": {
1087
+ "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS",
921
1088
  "AVANZADOS": "AVANZADOS",
922
- "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS",
923
- "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS"
1089
+ "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS"
924
1090
  }
925
1091
  }
926
1092
  }
927
1093
  },
928
1094
  "private-vms-cri-loitering-events": {
929
1095
  "name": "Loitering Events (CRI)",
930
- "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <h3> Loitering events identify when a vessel is operating away from shore while moving at low speeds. Loitering events highlight when a vessel is behaving in a manner consistent with a potential encounter event (i.e. stationary or drifting slowly at sea) but no encountering vessel is visible on AIS. As such, these should not be considered indicators of likely encounter events, but rather periods of time when undetected encounters could have potentially occurred. </h3> <ul> <p>Global Fishing Watch classifies an event as a loitering event when:</p> <li> The vessel is located more than 20 nautical miles (37.04 kilometers) from shore, and </li> <li>Maintains an average speed of less than 2 knots,</li> <li>For a continuous period of at least 1 hour.</li> </ul> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> Global Fishing Watch events are the result of a rule-based algorithm being applied to AIS positional data. Loitering events should be cross-verified with other sources of information (like RFMO transshipment records) when possible. </li> <li> Vessels in loitering events may not be meeting any other vessels at the time of the event. Other events in which a vessel may remain fairly stationary or moving slowly while at sea include: maintenance, losing vessel power, idling during poor weather, waiting outside of port for permission to dock, normal fishing behavior, and more. </li> <li> Due to the individual definitions of loitering events, fishing events, and encounter events, it is possible for a single vessel movement pattern to trigger multiple event types. </li> <li> A loitering event position may not align exactly with the vessel’s tracks. Global Fishing Watch determines a single location for each event by calculating the average latitude and longitude of all positions within that event. As a result it is possible the vessel never occupied that precise location during the event. </li> <li> Global Fishing Watch recommends to visually inspect vessel tracks, always refer to additional data source and/or information, and request records from a vessel to confirm any findings, as part of the users due diligence process. </li> </ul> <h2>Learn more</h2> <p> Learn more about considerations of using AIS data by looking at the <a href=\"https://globalfishingwatch.org/data-documentation/apparent-fishing-events-ais/\" >AIS limitations section in the Apparent fishing events (AIS) data documentation.</a >. </p>",
1096
+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <p> Encounter events identify instances where two vessels appear to meet at sea. Our VMS Encounter dataset is currently experimental, and we calculate these events across all VMS sources. Because VMS predominantly tracks fishing vessels, encounters in this dataset are more likely to reflect fishing-related activity - such as pair fishing - than transshipment-related activity, which is more commonly observed in AIS data. </p> <p> Global Fishing Watch classifies an event as an encounter when two vessels are detected: </p> <ul> <li>Within 500 meters of one another</li> <li>For a duration of at least 2 hours</li> <li>Traveling at a median speed of less than 2 knots</li> <li> And located at least 10 kilometers (5.4 nautical miles) from a coastal anchorage </li> </ul> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> When encounter events involve a vessel in a foreign VMS source, the foreign vessel will appear as anonymous due to MOU restrictions. </li> <li> Because VMS datasets consist predominantly of fishing vessels - unlike AIS, which captures a broader range of vessel types - encounter events are more likely to represent pair fishing activity than transshipment. As with all Global Fishing Watch encounter data, these events are derived from rule-based algorithms and may reflect a wide range of at-sea interactions, so they should not be taken as evidence of any specific activity without further investigation. </li> <li> Some vessels appear in multiple VMS sources simultaneously due to country regulations, which can cause a vessel to appear to encounter itself. To reduce this noise, we have applied a filter that removes encounters between vessels sharing the same name across different VMS sources, though this is not a perfect solution and we are continuing to work on improvements. </li> <li> Encounters between the same two vessels occurring within a 4-hour window are consolidated into a single encounter event. </li> <li> An encounter event position may not align exactly with the vessels' tracks. Global Fishing Watch determines a single location for each event by calculating the average latitude and longitude of all positions within the event. </li> <li> Global Fishing Watch recommends visually inspecting vessel tracks, always referring to additional data sources and/or information, and requesting records from a vessel to confirm any findings, as part of the users' due diligence process. </li> </ul>",
931
1097
  "schema": {
932
1098
  "duration": {
933
1099
  "keyword": "duration",
@@ -951,7 +1117,7 @@
951
1117
  },
952
1118
  "private-vms-cri-port-visits-events": {
953
1119
  "name": "Port Visits Events (CRI)",
954
- "description": "The dataset contains port visits events for CRI",
1120
+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <p> The Port Visits VMS dataset detects vessel movements in and out of ports. To identify these, we use a combined anchorage list derived from our AIS dataset, supplemented by smaller ports - not captured in AIS - that were shared by our country partners. If you believe a port in your country is missing from this dataset, please do not hesitate to reach out to our support team at <a href=\"mailto:support@globalfishingwatch.org\" >support@globalfishingwatch.org</a >. </p> <p>A port visit is shown on the map when VMS data shows a vessel:</p> <ul> <li>Entering within 3 kilometers of an anchorage point at the port entry,</li> <li> Exiting within 4 kilometers of an anchorage point designated as the port exit <ul> <li> Experiencing a port gap (i.e. no VMS transmissions for 4 hours or more, which may indicate VMS was turned off while in port), or </li> <li> Undergoing a port stop, where the vessel's speed drops below 0.2 knots and later increases above 0.5 knots. </li> </ul> </li> </ul> <p> Port stops are used to distinguish actual port visits from coastal transits. </p> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> In our VMS port events, residual positions within port can sometimes persist after a vessel has departed, causing events to appear extended beyond the vessel's actual time in port. This is a result of the limited filtering currently applied to our VMS data, as we are still working on adapting filters that effectively remove noisy positions without discarding valid ones. We aim to address this in future releases. </li> <li> Lower-confidence port visits - often caused by noisy, sparse, or incomplete VMS transmissions - are currently excluded from the map. Lower-confidence port visits, while sometimes legitimate, can falsely suggest a port visit that did not occur. </li> <li> Ongoing port visits will not be identified on the map, as a port exit is required by definition for high-confidence port visits to be detected. </li> <li> Global Fishing Watch recommends to verify port visits, always refer to additional data source and/or information, and request records from a vessel to confirm any findings, as part of the users' due diligence process. </li> </ul>",
955
1121
  "schema": {
956
1122
  "confidences": {
957
1123
  "keyword": "confidences",
@@ -988,9 +1154,9 @@
988
1154
  "source_fleet": {
989
1155
  "keyword": "source_fleet",
990
1156
  "enum": {
1157
+ "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS",
991
1158
  "AVANZADOS": "AVANZADOS",
992
- "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS",
993
- "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS"
1159
+ "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS"
994
1160
  }
995
1161
  },
996
1162
  "speed": {
@@ -1026,19 +1192,19 @@
1026
1192
  "name": "VMS Costa Rica",
1027
1193
  "description": "Vessels (VMS Costa Rica)",
1028
1194
  "schema": {
1029
- "source_fleet": {
1030
- "keyword": "source_fleet",
1195
+ "selfReportedInfo.sourceFleet": {
1196
+ "keyword": "sourceFleet",
1031
1197
  "enum": {
1032
- "costarica_vms_industrial_longline": "costarica_vms_industrial_longline",
1033
- "costarica_vms_atuneros": "costarica_vms_atuneros",
1034
- "costarica_vms_sardineros": "costarica_vms_sardineros"
1198
+ "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS",
1199
+ "AVANZADOS": "AVANZADOS",
1200
+ "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS"
1035
1201
  }
1036
1202
  }
1037
1203
  }
1038
1204
  },
1039
1205
  "private-vms-ecu-encounters-events": {
1040
1206
  "name": "Encounter Events. (ECU)",
1041
- "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <h3> Encounter events identify instances where two vessels appear to meet at sea. </h3> <ul> <p> Global Fishing Watch classifies an event as an encounter when two vessels are detected: </p> <li>Within 500 meters of one another</li> <li>For a duration of at least 2 hours</li> <li>Traveling at a median speed of less than 2 knots</li> <li> And located at least 10 kilometers (5.4 nautical miles) from a coastal anchorage. </li> </ul> <ul> <p> Users can filter encounter events by vessel characteristics and context, including: </p> <li>Duration of encounter</li> <li> Vessel flag - Shows encounters where at least one vessel is flagged to the selected country </li> <li> Next port visit after the encounter - Shows encounters where at least one vessel is has visited the selected port(s) </li> <li>Vessel types involved in the encounter</li> <li>User saved vessel group</li> </ul> <ul> <p>Currently displayed encounter types include:</p> <li>Carrier ⇄ Bunker (experimental)</li> <li>Carrier Fishing</li> <li>Fishing Bunker (experimental)</li> <li>Fishing Fishing (experimental)</li> <li>Support Fishing</li> </ul> <p> To view more details about a specific encounter—such as its location or the identity of the encountered vessel—click the “See more” icon associated with the event. </p> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> Global Fishing Watch events are the result of rule-based algorithms being applied to AIS positional data. There are many potential reasons for vessels to meet at sea. Such interactions may include transshipment of catch or supplies, equipment transfers, crew changes, safety-related matters, and more. Encounter data should therefore be viewed as an indicator for review. </li> <li> Encounters that do not meet the specifications of GFW encounter events described above are not included in the map, such as encounters less than two hours and in-port encounters. </li> <li> Encounters between the same two vessels occurring within a 4-hour window are consolidated into a single encounter event. While multiple encounters within such a short timeframe are possible, they remain exceptionally rare. </li> <li> The 500-meter proximity threshold is calculated using implied positions—not raw AIS messages. Since AIS transmissions occur at irregular intervals, vessel positions are estimated by a 10-minute time grid using reported course and speed. Proximity is then calculated based on these estimated positions. Due to this modeling approach, it is possible that vessels identified in an encounter may not have been physically within 500 meters of each other for the entire 2-hour period. </li> <li> Bias in vessel identification and gear classification can result in the unexpected presence or absence of an encounter. Misclassifications in vessel type may occur due to inconsistent or incomplete vessel registry data. Misclassifications can also happen when algorithms struggle to appropriately categorize vessels, for instance, where vessels use several gears (thus changing their behavioral patterns) or when a vessel’s MMSI (maritime mobile service identity) number is used by more than one vessel. </li> <li> An encounter event position may not align exactly with the vessels' tracks. Global Fishing Watch determines a single location for each event by calculating the average latitude and longitude of all positions within the event. As a result it is possible the vessels never occupied that precise location during the encounter event. </li> <li> Global Fishing Watch recommends to visually inspect vessel tracks, always refer to additional data source and/or information, and request records from a vessel to confirm any findings, as part of the users due diligence process. </li> </ul> <h2>Learn more</h2> <p> You can read more about transshipment behaviour from our <a href=\"http://globalfishingwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/GlobalViewOfTransshipment_Aug2017.pdf\" >report</a > or <a href=\"https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2018.00240/full\" >scientific publication</a >. </p>",
1207
+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <p> Encounter events identify instances where two vessels appear to meet at sea. Our VMS Encounter dataset is currently experimental, and we calculate these events across all VMS sources. Because VMS predominantly tracks fishing vessels, encounters in this dataset are more likely to reflect fishing-related activity - such as pair fishing - than transshipment-related activity, which is more commonly observed in AIS data. </p> <p> Global Fishing Watch classifies an event as an encounter when two vessels are detected: </p> <ul> <li>Within 500 meters of one another</li> <li>For a duration of at least 2 hours</li> <li>Traveling at a median speed of less than 2 knots</li> <li> And located at least 10 kilometers (5.4 nautical miles) from a coastal anchorage </li> </ul> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> When encounter events involve a vessel in a foreign VMS source, the foreign vessel will appear as anonymous due to MOU restrictions. Specifically, we only display the flag and vessel type for the foreign vessel and hide the rest of its identity fields, so the vessel name appears as “Unknown” on the map. </li> <li> Because VMS datasets consist predominantly of fishing vessels - unlike AIS, which captures a broader range of vessel types - encounter events are more likely to represent pair fishing activity than transshipment. As with all Global Fishing Watch encounter data, these events are derived from rule-based algorithms and may reflect a wide range of at-sea interactions, so they should not be taken as evidence of any specific activity without further investigation. </li> <li> Some vessels appear in multiple VMS sources simultaneously due to country regulations, which can cause a vessel to appear to encounter itself. To reduce this noise, we have applied a filter that removes encounters between vessels sharing the same name across different VMS sources, though this is not a perfect solution and we are continuing to work on improvements. </li> <li> Encounters between the same two vessels occurring within a 4-hour window are consolidated into a single encounter event. Note that the 10 km anchorage-distance filter is applied before this merging step, so in rare cases a merged encounter’s average location may fall within 10 km of an anchorage even though each underlying (pre-merge) encounter was more than 10 km from the nearest anchorage. </li> <li> It is a known issue that the encounter detection algorithm does not evaluate continuity across the day boundary (midnight UTC). As a result, encounters that span midnight are not detected and will be missing from the dataset. Specifically those that start after ~22:00 UTC or end before ~02:00 UTC. </li> <li> Encounter detection relies on first creating a regular 10-minute timeline of a vessel’s positions. This timeline is created by interpolating between consecutive positions only when they are less than 60 minutes apart. If a vessel’s polling rate is 60 minutes or longer, no interpolation is performed, so encounters for that vessel are less likely to be detected and may be missed. </li> <li> An encounter event position may not align exactly with the vessels' tracks. Global Fishing Watch determines a single location for each event by calculating the average latitude and longitude of all positions within the event. </li> <li> Global Fishing Watch recommends visually inspecting vessel tracks, always referring to additional data sources and/or information, and requesting records from a vessel to confirm any findings, as part of the users' due diligence process. </li> </ul>",
1042
1208
  "schema": {
1043
1209
  "duration": {
1044
1210
  "keyword": "duration",
@@ -1089,7 +1255,7 @@
1089
1255
  },
1090
1256
  "private-vms-ecu-loitering-events": {
1091
1257
  "name": "Loitering Events (ECU)",
1092
- "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <h3> Loitering events identify when a vessel is operating away from shore while moving at low speeds. Loitering events highlight when a vessel is behaving in a manner consistent with a potential encounter event (i.e. stationary or drifting slowly at sea) but no encountering vessel is visible on AIS. As such, these should not be considered indicators of likely encounter events, but rather periods of time when undetected encounters could have potentially occurred. </h3> <ul> <p>Global Fishing Watch classifies an event as a loitering event when:</p> <li> The vessel is located more than 20 nautical miles (37.04 kilometers) from shore, and </li> <li>Maintains an average speed of less than 2 knots,</li> <li>For a continuous period of at least 1 hour.</li> </ul> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> Global Fishing Watch events are the result of a rule-based algorithm being applied to AIS positional data. Loitering events should be cross-verified with other sources of information (like RFMO transshipment records) when possible. </li> <li> Vessels in loitering events may not be meeting any other vessels at the time of the event. Other events in which a vessel may remain fairly stationary or moving slowly while at sea include: maintenance, losing vessel power, idling during poor weather, waiting outside of port for permission to dock, normal fishing behavior, and more. </li> <li> Due to the individual definitions of loitering events, fishing events, and encounter events, it is possible for a single vessel movement pattern to trigger multiple event types. </li> <li> A loitering event position may not align exactly with the vessel’s tracks. Global Fishing Watch determines a single location for each event by calculating the average latitude and longitude of all positions within that event. As a result it is possible the vessel never occupied that precise location during the event. </li> <li> Global Fishing Watch recommends to visually inspect vessel tracks, always refer to additional data source and/or information, and request records from a vessel to confirm any findings, as part of the users due diligence process. </li> </ul> <h2>Learn more</h2> <p> Learn more about considerations of using AIS data by looking at the <a href=\"https://globalfishingwatch.org/data-documentation/apparent-fishing-events-ais/\" >AIS limitations section in the Apparent fishing events (AIS) data documentation.</a >. </p>",
1258
+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <p> Encounter events identify instances where two vessels appear to meet at sea. Our VMS Encounter dataset is currently experimental, and we calculate these events across all VMS sources. Because VMS predominantly tracks fishing vessels, encounters in this dataset are more likely to reflect fishing-related activity - such as pair fishing - than transshipment-related activity, which is more commonly observed in AIS data. </p> <p> Global Fishing Watch classifies an event as an encounter when two vessels are detected: </p> <ul> <li>Within 500 meters of one another</li> <li>For a duration of at least 2 hours</li> <li>Traveling at a median speed of less than 2 knots</li> <li> And located at least 10 kilometers (5.4 nautical miles) from a coastal anchorage </li> </ul> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> When encounter events involve a vessel in a foreign VMS source, the foreign vessel will appear as anonymous due to MOU restrictions. </li> <li> Because VMS datasets consist predominantly of fishing vessels - unlike AIS, which captures a broader range of vessel types - encounter events are more likely to represent pair fishing activity than transshipment. As with all Global Fishing Watch encounter data, these events are derived from rule-based algorithms and may reflect a wide range of at-sea interactions, so they should not be taken as evidence of any specific activity without further investigation. </li> <li> Some vessels appear in multiple VMS sources simultaneously due to country regulations, which can cause a vessel to appear to encounter itself. To reduce this noise, we have applied a filter that removes encounters between vessels sharing the same name across different VMS sources, though this is not a perfect solution and we are continuing to work on improvements. </li> <li> Encounters between the same two vessels occurring within a 4-hour window are consolidated into a single encounter event. </li> <li> An encounter event position may not align exactly with the vessels' tracks. Global Fishing Watch determines a single location for each event by calculating the average latitude and longitude of all positions within the event. </li> <li> Global Fishing Watch recommends visually inspecting vessel tracks, always referring to additional data sources and/or information, and requesting records from a vessel to confirm any findings, as part of the users' due diligence process. </li> </ul>",
1093
1259
  "schema": {
1094
1260
  "duration": {
1095
1261
  "keyword": "duration",
@@ -1178,7 +1344,12 @@
1178
1344
  },
1179
1345
  "private-vms-ecu-vessel-identity": {
1180
1346
  "name": "VMS Ecuador",
1181
- "description": "Vessels (VMS Ecuador)"
1347
+ "description": "Vessels (VMS Ecuador)",
1348
+ "schema": {
1349
+ "selfReportedInfo.registryNumber": {
1350
+ "keyword": "registryNumber"
1351
+ }
1352
+ }
1182
1353
  },
1183
1354
  "private-vms-mne-encounters-events": {
1184
1355
  "name": "Encounter Events. (MNE)",
@@ -1194,7 +1365,8 @@
1194
1365
  "encounter_type": {
1195
1366
  "keyword": "encounter_type",
1196
1367
  "enum": {
1197
- "FISHING-FISHING": "FISHING-FISHING"
1368
+ "FISHING-FISHING": "FISHING-FISHING",
1369
+ "FISHING-SUPPORT": "FISHING-SUPPORT"
1198
1370
  }
1199
1371
  }
1200
1372
  }
@@ -1213,17 +1385,6 @@
1213
1385
  "4": "4",
1214
1386
  "5": "5"
1215
1387
  }
1216
- },
1217
- "vessel_type": {
1218
- "keyword": "vessel_type",
1219
- "enum": {
1220
- "FISHING": "FISHING",
1221
- "NON_FISHING": "NON_FISHING",
1222
- "SUPPORT": "SUPPORT",
1223
- "CARRIER": "CARRIER",
1224
- "RESEARCH": "RESEARCH",
1225
- "": ""
1226
- }
1227
1388
  }
1228
1389
  }
1229
1390
  },
@@ -1234,7 +1395,7 @@
1234
1395
  "duration": {
1235
1396
  "keyword": "duration",
1236
1397
  "enum": {
1237
- "2": "2",
1398
+ "0": "0",
1238
1399
  "48": "48"
1239
1400
  }
1240
1401
  },
@@ -1266,7 +1427,7 @@
1266
1427
  "duration": {
1267
1428
  "keyword": "duration",
1268
1429
  "enum": {
1269
- "2": "2",
1430
+ "0": "0",
1270
1431
  "48": "48"
1271
1432
  }
1272
1433
  },
@@ -1318,7 +1479,15 @@
1318
1479
  },
1319
1480
  "private-vms-mne-vessel-identity": {
1320
1481
  "name": "VMS Montenegro",
1321
- "description": "Vessels (VMS Montenegro)"
1482
+ "description": "Vessels (VMS Montenegro)",
1483
+ "schema": {
1484
+ "selfReportedInfo.externalId": {
1485
+ "keyword": "externalId"
1486
+ },
1487
+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
1488
+ "keyword": "imo"
1489
+ }
1490
+ }
1322
1491
  },
1323
1492
  "private-vms-nor-encounters-events": {
1324
1493
  "name": "Encounter Events. (NOR)",
@@ -1365,7 +1534,7 @@
1365
1534
  "duration": {
1366
1535
  "keyword": "duration",
1367
1536
  "enum": {
1368
- "2": "2",
1537
+ "0": "0",
1369
1538
  "48": "48"
1370
1539
  }
1371
1540
  },
@@ -1397,7 +1566,7 @@
1397
1566
  "duration": {
1398
1567
  "keyword": "duration",
1399
1568
  "enum": {
1400
- "2": "2",
1569
+ "0": "0",
1401
1570
  "48": "48"
1402
1571
  }
1403
1572
  },
@@ -1510,7 +1679,7 @@
1510
1679
  "duration": {
1511
1680
  "keyword": "duration",
1512
1681
  "enum": {
1513
- "2": "2",
1682
+ "0": "0",
1514
1683
  "48": "48"
1515
1684
  }
1516
1685
  },
@@ -1542,7 +1711,7 @@
1542
1711
  "duration": {
1543
1712
  "keyword": "duration",
1544
1713
  "enum": {
1545
- "2": "2",
1714
+ "0": "0",
1546
1715
  "48": "48"
1547
1716
  }
1548
1717
  },
@@ -1602,7 +1771,18 @@
1602
1771
  },
1603
1772
  "private-vms-pan-vessel-identity": {
1604
1773
  "name": "VMS Panama",
1605
- "description": "Vessels (VMS Panama)"
1774
+ "description": "Vessels (VMS Panama)",
1775
+ "schema": {
1776
+ "selfReportedInfo.externalId": {
1777
+ "keyword": "externalId"
1778
+ },
1779
+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
1780
+ "keyword": "imo"
1781
+ },
1782
+ "selfReportedInfo.ssvid": {
1783
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
1784
+ }
1785
+ }
1606
1786
  },
1607
1787
  "private-vms-per-encounters-events": {
1608
1788
  "name": "Encounter Events. (PER)",
@@ -1669,7 +1849,7 @@
1669
1849
  "duration": {
1670
1850
  "keyword": "duration",
1671
1851
  "enum": {
1672
- "2": "2",
1852
+ "0": "0",
1673
1853
  "48": "48"
1674
1854
  }
1675
1855
  },
@@ -1701,7 +1881,7 @@
1701
1881
  "duration": {
1702
1882
  "keyword": "duration",
1703
1883
  "enum": {
1704
- "2": "2",
1884
+ "0": "0",
1705
1885
  "48": "48"
1706
1886
  }
1707
1887
  },
@@ -1760,7 +1940,10 @@
1760
1940
  "name": "VMS Peru",
1761
1941
  "description": "Vessels (VMS Peru)",
1762
1942
  "schema": {
1763
- "hull": {
1943
+ "selfReportedInfo.externalId": {
1944
+ "keyword": "externalId"
1945
+ },
1946
+ "selfReportedInfo.hull": {
1764
1947
  "keyword": "hull",
1765
1948
  "enum": {
1766
1949
  "ACERO NAVAL": "ACERO NAVAL",
@@ -1770,19 +1953,20 @@
1770
1953
  "FIBRA DE VIDRIO": "FIBRA DE VIDRIO"
1771
1954
  }
1772
1955
  },
1773
- "origin": {
1956
+ "selfReportedInfo.origin": {
1774
1957
  "keyword": "origin",
1775
1958
  "enum": {
1776
- "Peru": "Peru",
1777
- "Foreign": "Foreign"
1959
+ "PERU": "PERU",
1960
+ "FOREIGN": "FOREIGN"
1778
1961
  }
1779
1962
  },
1780
- "sourceFleet": {
1963
+ "selfReportedInfo.sourceFleet": {
1781
1964
  "keyword": "sourceFleet",
1782
1965
  "enum": {
1783
- "industrial": "industrial",
1784
- "artisanal": "artisanal",
1785
- "not defined": "not defined"
1966
+ "": "",
1967
+ "ARTISANAL": "ARTISANAL",
1968
+ "INDUSTRIAL": "INDUSTRIAL",
1969
+ "SMALL-SCALE": "SMALL-SCALE"
1786
1970
  }
1787
1971
  }
1788
1972
  }
@@ -1844,17 +2028,6 @@
1844
2028
  "4": "4",
1845
2029
  "5": "5"
1846
2030
  }
1847
- },
1848
- "vessel_type": {
1849
- "keyword": "vessel_type",
1850
- "enum": {
1851
- "FISHING": "FISHING",
1852
- "NON_FISHING": "NON_FISHING",
1853
- "SUPPORT": "SUPPORT",
1854
- "CARRIER": "CARRIER",
1855
- "RESEARCH": "RESEARCH",
1856
- "": ""
1857
- }
1858
2031
  }
1859
2032
  }
1860
2033
  },
@@ -1865,7 +2038,7 @@
1865
2038
  "duration": {
1866
2039
  "keyword": "duration",
1867
2040
  "enum": {
1868
- "2": "2",
2041
+ "0": "0",
1869
2042
  "48": "48"
1870
2043
  }
1871
2044
  },
@@ -1897,7 +2070,7 @@
1897
2070
  "duration": {
1898
2071
  "keyword": "duration",
1899
2072
  "enum": {
1900
- "2": "2",
2073
+ "0": "0",
1901
2074
  "48": "48"
1902
2075
  }
1903
2076
  },
@@ -1949,7 +2122,12 @@
1949
2122
  },
1950
2123
  "private-vms-plw-vessel-identity": {
1951
2124
  "name": "VMS Palau",
1952
- "description": "Vessels (VMS Palau)"
2125
+ "description": "Vessels (VMS Palau)",
2126
+ "schema": {
2127
+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
2128
+ "keyword": "imo"
2129
+ }
2130
+ }
1953
2131
  },
1954
2132
  "private-vms-png-encounters-events": {
1955
2133
  "name": "Encounter Events. (PNG)",
@@ -1998,7 +2176,7 @@
1998
2176
  "duration": {
1999
2177
  "keyword": "duration",
2000
2178
  "enum": {
2001
- "2": "2",
2179
+ "0": "0",
2002
2180
  "48": "48"
2003
2181
  }
2004
2182
  },
@@ -2030,7 +2208,7 @@
2030
2208
  "duration": {
2031
2209
  "keyword": "duration",
2032
2210
  "enum": {
2033
- "2": "2",
2211
+ "0": "0",
2034
2212
  "48": "48"
2035
2213
  }
2036
2214
  },
@@ -2097,26 +2275,6 @@
2097
2275
  }
2098
2276
  }
2099
2277
  },
2100
- "proto-global-skylight-viirs": {
2101
- "name": "Skylight Viirs",
2102
- "description": "Skylight viirs",
2103
- "schema": {
2104
- "matched": {
2105
- "keyword": "matched",
2106
- "enum": {
2107
- "true": "true",
2108
- "false": "false"
2109
- }
2110
- },
2111
- "radiance": {
2112
- "keyword": "radiance",
2113
- "enum": {
2114
- "0": "0",
2115
- "1000": "1000"
2116
- }
2117
- }
2118
- }
2119
- },
2120
2278
  "public-areas-to-be-avoided-1618836788619": {
2121
2279
  "name": "Areas to be Avoided by Cargo Shipping",
2122
2280
  "description": "25 nm buffer around islands recommending shipping diversion"
@@ -2177,7 +2335,15 @@
2177
2335
  },
2178
2336
  "public-bra-onyxsat-vessel-identity-fishing": {
2179
2337
  "name": "VMS Brazil (Fishing Vessels)",
2180
- "description": "Fishing Vessels (VMS Brazil)"
2338
+ "description": "Fishing Vessels (VMS Brazil)",
2339
+ "schema": {
2340
+ "selfReportedInfo.targetSpecies": {
2341
+ "keyword": "targetSpecies"
2342
+ },
2343
+ "targetSpecies": {
2344
+ "keyword": "targetSpecies"
2345
+ }
2346
+ }
2181
2347
  },
2182
2348
  "public-brazil-opentuna-presence": {
2183
2349
  "name": "Brazil Open Tuna VMS",
@@ -2185,7 +2351,59 @@
2185
2351
  },
2186
2352
  "public-brazil-opentuna-vessel-identity-fishing": {
2187
2353
  "name": "Brazil Open Tuna VMS (Fishing vessels)",
2188
- "description": "Dataset for VMS Brazil (Public)"
2354
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Brazil (Public)",
2355
+ "schema": {
2356
+ "selfReportedInfo.code": {
2357
+ "keyword": "code"
2358
+ }
2359
+ }
2360
+ },
2361
+ "public-cfc-exploration-areas-individual": {
2362
+ "name": "CFC Exploration Areas",
2363
+ "description": "Cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts are often found along the tops and edges of seamounts, knolls, and plateaus at depths ranging between 800 meters to 2500+ meters. These crusts can contain cobalt, nickel, manganese, and rare earth elements. Proposed methods for mining cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts include grinding and entirely removing the crust from the host rock – which are inhabited by marine biodiversity – then delivering the resulting slurry to the surface. For cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts, the exploration area allocated to each contractor is 3,000 square kilometres and consists of 150 blocks. Each block is no greater than 20 square kilometres.",
2364
+ "schema": {
2365
+ "act_date": {
2366
+ "keyword": "act_date",
2367
+ "enum": {
2368
+ "1447023600000": "1447023600000",
2369
+ "1697752800000": "1697752800000"
2370
+ }
2371
+ },
2372
+ "area_key": {
2373
+ "keyword": "area_key"
2374
+ },
2375
+ "contract_id": {
2376
+ "keyword": "contract_id",
2377
+ "enum": {
2378
+ "KOREACRFC1": "KOREACRFC1",
2379
+ "COMRACRFC1": "COMRACRFC1",
2380
+ "BrazilCRFC1": "BrazilCRFC1",
2381
+ "JOGMECCRFC1": "JOGMECCRFC1",
2382
+ "RUSMNRCRFC1": "RUSMNRCRFC1"
2383
+ }
2384
+ }
2385
+ }
2386
+ },
2387
+ "public-cfc-reserved-areas-individual": {
2388
+ "name": "CFC Reserved Areas",
2389
+ "description": "Cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts are often found along the tops and edges of seamounts, knolls, and plateaus at depths ranging between 800 meters to 2500+ meters. These crusts can contain cobalt, nickel, manganese, and rare earth elements. Proposed methods for mining cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts include grinding and entirely removing the crust from the host rock – which are inhabited by marine biodiversity – then delivering the resulting slurry to the surface. Reserved Areas under the International Seabed Authority are a critical mechanism to ensure developing countries have access to deep-sea mineral resources in the future. These areas are typically contributed by developed States when they apply for exploration rights.",
2390
+ "schema": {
2391
+ "act_date": {
2392
+ "keyword": "act_date",
2393
+ "enum": {
2394
+ "1425942000000": "1425942000000"
2395
+ }
2396
+ },
2397
+ "area_key": {
2398
+ "keyword": "area_key"
2399
+ },
2400
+ "contract_id": {
2401
+ "keyword": "contract_id",
2402
+ "enum": {
2403
+ "CRFCReserved": "CRFCReserved"
2404
+ }
2405
+ }
2406
+ }
2189
2407
  },
2190
2408
  "public-chile-fishing-effort": {
2191
2409
  "name": "Chile VMS",
@@ -2223,6 +2441,10 @@
2223
2441
  "name": "Chile VMS (Non fishing Vessels)",
2224
2442
  "description": "Dataset for VMS Chile (Public)"
2225
2443
  },
2444
+ "public-clarion-clipperton-zone-isa-claim-areas": {
2445
+ "name": "Clarion-Clipperton Zone ISA License Areas",
2446
+ "description": "This area represents the cumulative and contiguous area of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, a region in the Eastern Pacific that is being targeted for seabed mining and managed by the International Seabed Authority. This region includes claim areas slated for exploration, areas reserved for developing states, and areas protected for environmental interest. The primary resource targeted in this region is polymetallic nodules."
2447
+ },
2226
2448
  "public-cold-water-corals": {
2227
2449
  "name": "Cold Water Corals",
2228
2450
  "description": "Buffered at ~1km"
@@ -2249,7 +2471,7 @@
2249
2471
  "name": "Costa Rica VMS",
2250
2472
  "description": "Dataset for VMS Costa Rica (Public)",
2251
2473
  "schema": {
2252
- "fleet": {
2474
+ "selfReportedInfo.fleet": {
2253
2475
  "keyword": "fleet",
2254
2476
  "enum": {
2255
2477
  "costarica_vms_industrial_longline": "costarica_vms_industrial_longline",
@@ -2286,11 +2508,27 @@
2286
2508
  },
2287
2509
  "public-ecuador-vessel-identity-fishing": {
2288
2510
  "name": "Ecuador VMS (Fishing vessels)",
2289
- "description": "VMS Ecuador (Fishing vessels)"
2511
+ "description": "VMS Ecuador (Fishing vessels)",
2512
+ "schema": {
2513
+ "selfReportedInfo.nationalId": {
2514
+ "keyword": "nationalId"
2515
+ },
2516
+ "selfReportedInfo.nNationalId": {
2517
+ "keyword": "nNationalId"
2518
+ }
2519
+ }
2290
2520
  },
2291
2521
  "public-ecuador-vessel-identity-non-fishing": {
2292
2522
  "name": "Ecuador VMS (Non fishing vessels)",
2293
- "description": "VMS Ecuador (Non fishing vessels)"
2523
+ "description": "VMS Ecuador (Non fishing vessels)",
2524
+ "schema": {
2525
+ "selfReportedInfo.nationalId": {
2526
+ "keyword": "nationalId"
2527
+ },
2528
+ "selfReportedInfo.nNationalId": {
2529
+ "keyword": "nNationalId"
2530
+ }
2531
+ }
2294
2532
  },
2295
2533
  "public-eez-areas": {
2296
2534
  "name": "EEZs",
@@ -2304,6 +2542,10 @@
2304
2542
  "name": "Areas boundaries for eez",
2305
2543
  "description": "EEZs boundaries are shown as solid lines for '200 NM', 'Treaty', 'Median line', 'Joint regime', 'Connection Line', 'Unilateral claim (undisputed)' and dashed lines for 'Joint regime', 'Unsettled', 'Unsettled median line' based on the 'LINE_TYPE' field. Flanders Marine Institute (2019). Maritime Boundaries Geodatabase: Maritime Boundaries and Exclusive Economic Zones (200NM), version 11. Source: marineregions.org"
2306
2544
  },
2545
+ "public-eez-land": {
2546
+ "name": "EEZ (marineregions.org)",
2547
+ "description": "Flanders Marine Institute (2019). Maritime Boundaries Geodatabase: Maritime Boundaries and Exclusive Economic Zones (200NM), version 11. Source: marineregions.org"
2548
+ },
2307
2549
  "public-fao": {
2308
2550
  "name": "FAO",
2309
2551
  "description": "FAO Major Fishing Areas for Statistical Purposes are arbitrary areas, the boundaries of which were determined in consultation with international fishery agencies on various considerations, including (i) the boundary of natural regions and the natural divisions of oceans and seas; (ii) the boundaries of adjacent statistical fisheries bodies already established in inter-governmental conventions and treaties; (iii) existing national practices; (iv) national boundaries; (v) the longitude and latitude grid system; (vi) the distribution of the aquatic fauna; and (vii) the distribution of the resources and the environmental conditions within an area."
@@ -2345,6 +2587,15 @@
2345
2587
  "medium": "medium",
2346
2588
  "low": "low"
2347
2589
  }
2590
+ },
2591
+ "structure_end_date": {
2592
+ "keyword": "structure_end_date"
2593
+ },
2594
+ "structure_id": {
2595
+ "keyword": "structure_id"
2596
+ },
2597
+ "structure_start_date": {
2598
+ "keyword": "structure_start_date"
2348
2599
  }
2349
2600
  }
2350
2601
  },
@@ -2362,7 +2613,23 @@
2362
2613
  },
2363
2614
  "public-global-all-tracks": {
2364
2615
  "name": "Tracks",
2365
- "description": "The dataset contains the tracks from all vessels (AIS) - Version 3.0"
2616
+ "description": "The dataset contains the tracks from all vessels (AIS) - Version 3.0",
2617
+ "schema": {
2618
+ "elevation": {
2619
+ "keyword": "elevation",
2620
+ "enum": {
2621
+ "0": "0",
2622
+ "-2000": "-2000"
2623
+ }
2624
+ },
2625
+ "speed": {
2626
+ "keyword": "speed",
2627
+ "enum": {
2628
+ "0": "0",
2629
+ "20": "20"
2630
+ }
2631
+ }
2632
+ }
2366
2633
  },
2367
2634
  "public-global-bathymetry": {
2368
2635
  "name": "Bathymetry",
@@ -2526,7 +2793,18 @@
2526
2793
  },
2527
2794
  "public-global-ports-footprint": {
2528
2795
  "name": "Anchorages convex hulls by portId",
2529
- "description": "Anchorages footprint using the convex hull grouped by portId"
2796
+ "description": "Anchorages footprint using the convex hull grouped by portId",
2797
+ "schema": {
2798
+ "area": {
2799
+ "keyword": "area"
2800
+ },
2801
+ "label": {
2802
+ "keyword": "label"
2803
+ },
2804
+ "perimeter": {
2805
+ "keyword": "perimeter"
2806
+ }
2807
+ }
2530
2808
  },
2531
2809
  "public-global-presence-vi-653": {
2532
2810
  "name": "AIS",
@@ -2650,6 +2928,26 @@
2650
2928
  }
2651
2929
  }
2652
2930
  },
2931
+ "public-global-skylight-viirs": {
2932
+ "name": "VIIRS (Skylight)",
2933
+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <ul> <li> This layer shows vessels detected using the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) \"Day/Night Band\" on board the Suomi NPP, NOAA-20, and NOAA-21 satellites. These sensors are uniquely sensitive to low-level light, allowing them to detect anthropogenic light sources on the ocean surface, such as vessel deck lights or high-intensity lamps used to lure catch. </li> <li> Skylight processes these nightly global sweeps using a suite of seven parallel computer vision models. These models differentiate between actual vessels and \"noise,\" such as gas flares or lightning, to provide a near real-time map of illuminated maritime activity during the middle of the night (typically 1-4 a.m. local time). </li> </ul> <h2>Use cases</h2> <ul> <li> Identify industrial fishing operations, such as squid jiggers and purse seiners, that use bright lights but may not be broadcasting AIS or VMS positions. </li> <li> Fill surveillance gaps in vast areas of the ocean where other satellite coverage is infrequent, as Night Lights provides daily global revisits. </li> <li> Use Night Lights in tandem with Radar (SAR) or Optical (Sentinel-2) detections to build a 24-hour timeline of a vessel's presence in an area of interest. </li> </ul> <h2>Caveats</h2> <ul> <li> While the model filters most noise, heavy cloud cover can diffuse light (making detections appear larger), and extreme moonlight reflection (glint) may occasionally result in false positives. </li> <li> With a resolution of approximately 750 meters per pixel, multiple vessels in close proximity may appear as a single detection. </li> </ul> <h2>Methods</h2> <ul> <li> Multi-Model Computer Vision: Because the VIIRS sensor was originally designed for weather monitoring, Skylight uses specialized machine learning to isolate vessel signals. The system employs seven distinct models to filter out non-vessel light sources like oil platform gas flares, lightning strikes, and ionospheric noise (the South Atlantic Anomaly). </li> <li> AIS Matching &amp; Identification: Skylight automatically attempts to correlate each light detection with AIS records. By comparing the light's location and timing with known vessel tracks, the system can distinguish between AIS-transmitting vessels and \"unmatched\" detections. </li> <li> Global Daily Coverage: The constellation of three satellites follows a sun-synchronous polar orbit. This ensures that every point on Earth is imaged at least once per night, with occasional multiple passes that can help analysts infer a vessel's course based on consecutive detections. </li> </ul>",
2934
+ "schema": {
2935
+ "matched": {
2936
+ "keyword": "matched",
2937
+ "enum": {
2938
+ "true": "true",
2939
+ "false": "false"
2940
+ }
2941
+ },
2942
+ "radiance": {
2943
+ "keyword": "radiance",
2944
+ "enum": {
2945
+ "0": "0",
2946
+ "1000": "1000"
2947
+ }
2948
+ }
2949
+ }
2950
+ },
2653
2951
  "public-global-sst-anomalies-max": {
2654
2952
  "name": "Sea Surface Temperatures anomalies (Max)",
2655
2953
  "description": "Sea surface temperatures anomalies (Max)"
@@ -2680,18 +2978,118 @@
2680
2978
  },
2681
2979
  "public-global-vessel-identity-vi-653": {
2682
2980
  "name": "AIS (all vessel types)",
2683
- "description": "Vessel Identity (all shiptypes)"
2981
+ "description": "Vessel Identity (all shiptypes)",
2982
+ "schema": {
2983
+ "imo": {
2984
+ "keyword": "imo"
2985
+ },
2986
+ "registryInfo.callsign": {
2987
+ "keyword": "callsign"
2988
+ },
2989
+ "registryInfo.flag": {
2990
+ "keyword": "flag"
2991
+ },
2992
+ "registryInfo.imo": {
2993
+ "keyword": "imo"
2994
+ },
2995
+ "registryInfo.nShipname": {
2996
+ "keyword": "nShipname"
2997
+ },
2998
+ "registryInfo.recordId": {
2999
+ "keyword": "recordId"
3000
+ },
3001
+ "registryInfo.shipname": {
3002
+ "keyword": "shipname"
3003
+ },
3004
+ "registryInfo.ssvid": {
3005
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
3006
+ },
3007
+ "registryInfo.transmissionDateFrom": {
3008
+ "keyword": "transmissionDateFrom"
3009
+ },
3010
+ "registryInfo.transmissionDateTo": {
3011
+ "keyword": "transmissionDateTo"
3012
+ },
3013
+ "registryLastUpdateDate": {
3014
+ "keyword": "registryLastUpdateDate"
3015
+ },
3016
+ "registryOwners.name": {
3017
+ "keyword": "name"
3018
+ },
3019
+ "registryTmtExtraFields.masterEntityId": {
3020
+ "keyword": "masterEntityId"
3021
+ },
3022
+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
3023
+ "keyword": "imo"
3024
+ },
3025
+ "selfReportedInfo.ssvid": {
3026
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
3027
+ },
3028
+ "ssvid": {
3029
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
3030
+ }
3031
+ }
2684
3032
  },
2685
3033
  "public-global-vessel-identity": {
2686
3034
  "name": "AIS (all vessel types)",
2687
- "description": "Vessel Identity (all shiptypes)"
3035
+ "description": "Vessel Identity (all shiptypes)",
3036
+ "schema": {
3037
+ "imo": {
3038
+ "keyword": "imo"
3039
+ },
3040
+ "registryInfo.callsign": {
3041
+ "keyword": "callsign"
3042
+ },
3043
+ "registryInfo.flag": {
3044
+ "keyword": "flag"
3045
+ },
3046
+ "registryInfo.imo": {
3047
+ "keyword": "imo"
3048
+ },
3049
+ "registryInfo.nShipname": {
3050
+ "keyword": "nShipname"
3051
+ },
3052
+ "registryInfo.recordId": {
3053
+ "keyword": "recordId"
3054
+ },
3055
+ "registryInfo.shipname": {
3056
+ "keyword": "shipname"
3057
+ },
3058
+ "registryInfo.ssvid": {
3059
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
3060
+ },
3061
+ "registryInfo.transmissionDateFrom": {
3062
+ "keyword": "transmissionDateFrom"
3063
+ },
3064
+ "registryInfo.transmissionDateTo": {
3065
+ "keyword": "transmissionDateTo"
3066
+ },
3067
+ "registryLastUpdateDate": {
3068
+ "keyword": "registryLastUpdateDate"
3069
+ },
3070
+ "registryOwners.name": {
3071
+ "keyword": "name"
3072
+ },
3073
+ "registryTmtExtraFields.masterEntityId": {
3074
+ "keyword": "masterEntityId"
3075
+ },
3076
+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
3077
+ "keyword": "imo"
3078
+ },
3079
+ "selfReportedInfo.ssvid": {
3080
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
3081
+ },
3082
+ "ssvid": {
3083
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
3084
+ }
3085
+ }
2688
3086
  },
2689
3087
  "public-global-vessel-insights": {
2690
3088
  "name": "AIS (Insights)",
2691
3089
  "description": "Vessel Insights from AIS"
2692
3090
  },
2693
3091
  "public-global-viirs-presence": {
2694
- "name": "Night light detections (VIIRS)",
3092
+ "name": "VIIRS (EOG)",
2695
3093
  "description": "The night lights vessel detections layer, known as visible infrared imaging radiometer suite or VIIRS, shows vessels at sea that satellites have detected by the light they emit at night. Though not exclusively associated with fishing vessels, this activity layer is likely to show vessels associated with activities like squid fishing, which use bright lights and fish at night.The satellite makes a single over-pass across the entire planet every night, detecting lights not obscured by clouds and designed to give at least one observation globally every day. Because the vessels are detected solely based on light emission, we can detect individual vessels and even entire fishing fleets that are not broadcasting automatic identification system (AIS) and so are not represented in the AIS apparent fishing effort layer. Lights from fixed offshore infrastructure and other non-vessel sources are excluded. Global Fishing Watch ingests boat detections processed from low light imaging data collected by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) VIIRS. The boat detections are processed in near-real time by NOAA’s Earth Observation Group, located in Boulder, Colorado. The data, known as VIIRS boat detections, picks up the presence of fishing vessels using lights to attract catch or to conduct operations at night. More than 85% of the detections are from vessels that lack AIS or Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) transponders. Due to the orbit design of polar orbiting satellites, regions closer to polar will have more over-passes per day, while equatorial regions have only one over-pass daily. Read more about this product, and download the data <a href=\"https://ngdc.noaa.gov/eog/viirs/download_boat.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">here</a>.Those using night light detections data should acknowledge the South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA), an area where the Earth's inner Van Allen radiation belt is at its lowest altitude, allowing more energetic particles from space to penetrate. When such particles hit the sensors on a satellite, this can create a false signal which might cause the algorithm to recognize it as a boat presence. A filtration algorithm has been applied but there may still be some mis-identification. The GFW layer includes quality flags (QF), including a filter to show only detections which NOAA has classified as vessels (QF1)",
2696
3094
  "schema": {
2697
3095
  "matched": {
@@ -2779,6 +3177,10 @@
2779
3177
  "name": "Important Marine Mammal Areas (IMMA)",
2780
3178
  "description": "<h2>Overview</h2>\n<p>Important Marine Mammal Areas (IMMAs) are defined as discrete portions of habitat, important to marine mammal species, that have the potential to be delineated and managed for conservation.</p>\n<p>IMMAs are not marine protected areas (MPAs). IMMAs are identified based on scientific expert knowledge, along with peer review, in order to prioritise their consideration for conservation measures by governments, intergovernmental organisations, conservation groups, industry or business, and the general public.</p>\n<p>The IMMA spatial layer aims to attract the attention of policy- and decision-makers to the opportunity, as well as to the need, to ensure the favourable conservation status of marine mammals in specific areas through the implementation of the most appropriate management measures. This can include an MPA designation, shipping or fishing regulations, and/or monitoring. However, IMMAs per se are a scientific knowledge product totally devoid of management implications.</p>\n<p>Please note the following:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Dedicated efforts to identify IMMAs have not yet covered all of the global ocean but global coverage is anticipated in the near future.</li><li>Waters outside of IMMAs in all areas of the ocean may still be important for the long-term survival and well-being of marine mammals.</li><li>Human activities taking place in marine environments everywhere must be conducted responsibly.</li></ul>"
2781
3179
  },
3180
+ "public-indian-ocean-isa-claim-areas": {
3181
+ "name": "Indian Ocean ISA License Areas",
3182
+ "description": "This layer depicts the ISA license areas for seabed mining in the Indian Ocean, which primarily contain polymetallic sulfides and polymetallic nodules. Exploration leases in this region are currently held by India, Germany, South Korea, and China."
3183
+ },
2782
3184
  "public-indonesia-fishing-effort": {
2783
3185
  "name": "Indonesia VMS",
2784
3186
  "description": "VMS data for Indonesia is not currently available for the period from July 2020.\n\nVessel monitoring system (VMS) data provided by the Indonesian Government’s Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries. Data is collected using their VMS via satellites and terrestrial receivers, and contains a vessel identities, gear type, location, speed, direction and more. Global Fishing Watch analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) data to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point for these vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data quite differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy and quality. Over time our algorithms will improve across all our broadcast data formats. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing presence algorithm for VMS, as for AIS, is a best effort to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity.” It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified, or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity where fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity,” “fishing” or “fishing effort,” as “apparent,” rather than certain. Any/all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at your own risk. Global Fishing Watch fishing presence algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers, combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and automated classification techniques."
@@ -2799,32 +3201,81 @@
2799
3201
  "name": "Inshore Fishing Zone",
2800
3202
  "description": "50 nm around the Tristan Archipelago and 40nm around Gough (8% of EEZ)"
2801
3203
  },
3204
+ "public-isa-areas-contractor": {
3205
+ "name": "ISA Areas by Contractor",
3206
+ "description": "<h2>ISA Contractor Information</h2> <table> <thead> <tr> <th>Contractor ID</th> <th>Preferred Contractor Name</th> <th>Nationality</th> </tr> </thead> <tbody> <tr> <td>BGRPMN1</td> <td> Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources of Germany - PMN </td> <td>Germany</td> </tr> <tr> <td>BGRPMS1</td> <td> Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources of Germany - PMS </td> <td>Germany</td> </tr> <tr> <td>BMJPMN1</td> <td>Blue Minerals Jamaica Limited (BMJ) - PMN</td> <td>Jamaica</td> </tr> <tr> <td>BPHDCPMN1</td> <td>Beijing Pioneer Hi-Tech Development Corporation - PMN</td> <td>China</td> </tr> <tr> <td>BrazilCRFC1</td> <td>Companhia de Pesquisa de Recursos Minerais S.A. - CRFC</td> <td>Brazil</td> </tr> <tr> <td>CIICPMN1</td> <td>Cook Islands Investment Corporation - PMN</td> <td>Cook Islands</td> </tr> <tr> <td>CMMPMN1</td> <td>China Minmetals Corporation - PMN</td> <td>China</td> </tr> <tr> <td>COMRACRFC1</td> <td> China Ocean Mineral Resources Research and Development Association - CRFC </td> <td>China</td> </tr> <tr> <td>COMRAPMN1</td> <td> China Ocean Mineral Resources Research and Development Association - PMN </td> <td>China</td> </tr> <tr> <td>COMRAPMS1</td> <td> China Ocean Mineral Resources Research and Development Association - PMS </td> <td>China</td> </tr> <tr> <td>DORDPMN1</td> <td>Deep Ocean Resources Development Co. Ltd. - PMN</td> <td>Japan</td> </tr> <tr> <td>GSRPMN1</td> <td>Global Sea Mineral Resources NV - PMN</td> <td>Belgium</td> </tr> <tr> <td>IFREMERPMN1</td> <td> Institut français de recherche pour l'exploitation de la mer - PMN </td> <td>France</td> </tr> <tr> <td>IFREMERPMS1</td> <td> Institut français de recherche pour l'exploitation de la mer - PMS </td> <td>France</td> </tr> <tr> <td>IndiaPMN1</td> <td>Government of India - PMN</td> <td>India</td> </tr> <tr> <td>IndiaPMS1</td> <td>Government of India - PMS</td> <td>India</td> </tr> <tr> <td>IOMPMN1</td> <td>Interoceanmetal Joint Organization - PMN</td> <td>Poland</td> </tr> <tr> <td>KOREACRFC1</td> <td>Government of the Republic of Korea - CRFC</td> <td>Korea</td> </tr> <tr> <td>KOREAPMN1</td> <td>Government of the Republic of Korea - PMN</td> <td>Korea</td> </tr> <tr> <td>KOREAPMS1</td> <td>Government of the Republic of Korea - PMS</td> <td>Korea</td> </tr> <tr> <td>MARAWAPMN1</td> <td>Marawa Research and Exploration Ltd. - PMN</td> <td>Kiribati</td> </tr> <tr> <td>NORIPMN1</td> <td>Nauru Ocean Resources Inc. - PMN</td> <td>Nauru</td> </tr> <tr> <td>OMSPMN1</td> <td>Ocean Mineral Singapore Pte. Ltd. - PMN</td> <td>Singapore</td> </tr> <tr> <td>POLPMS1</td> <td>Government of the Republic of Poland - PMS</td> <td>Poland</td> </tr> <tr> <td>RUSFEDPMS1</td> <td>Government of the Russian Federation - PMS</td> <td>Russia</td> </tr> <tr> <td>RUSMNRCRFC1</td> <td> Ministry of Natural resources and environment of the russian federation - CRFC </td> <td>Russia</td> </tr> <tr> <td>TOMLPMN1</td> <td>Tonga Offshore Mining Limited - PMN</td> <td>Tonga</td> </tr> <tr> <td>UKSRLPMN1</td> <td>UK Seabed Resources Ltd. - I - PMN</td> <td>UK</td> </tr> <tr> <td>UKSRLPMN2</td> <td>UK Seabed Resources Ltd. - II - PMN</td> <td>UK</td> </tr> <tr> <td>YUZHPMN1</td> <td>Yuzhmorgeologiya - PMN</td> <td>Russia</td> </tr> </tbody> </table>",
3207
+ "schema": {
3208
+ "act_date": {
3209
+ "keyword": "act_date",
3210
+ "enum": {
3211
+ "1425945600000": "1425945600000",
3212
+ "1474848000000": "1474848000000"
3213
+ }
3214
+ },
3215
+ "contract": {
3216
+ "keyword": "contract",
3217
+ "enum": {
3218
+ "BrazilCRFC1": "BrazilCRFC1",
3219
+ "BGRPMN1": "BGRPMN1",
3220
+ "IFREMERPMN1": "IFREMERPMN1",
3221
+ "KOREACRFC1": "KOREACRFC1",
3222
+ "KOREAPMN1": "KOREAPMN1",
3223
+ "JOGMECCRFC1": "JOGMECCRFC1",
3224
+ "IFREMERPMS1": "IFREMERPMS1",
3225
+ "IOMPMN1": "IOMPMN1",
3226
+ "BPHDCPMN1": "BPHDCPMN1",
3227
+ "DORDPMN1": "DORDPMN1",
3228
+ "POLPMS1": "POLPMS1",
3229
+ "UKSRLPMN2": "UKSRLPMN2",
3230
+ "UKSRLPMN1": "UKSRLPMN1",
3231
+ "YUZHPMN1": "YUZHPMN1",
3232
+ "BMJPMN1": "BMJPMN1",
3233
+ "RUSMNRCRFC1": "RUSMNRCRFC1",
3234
+ "CIICPMN1": "CIICPMN1",
3235
+ "IndiaPMS1": "IndiaPMS1",
3236
+ "IndiaPMN1": "IndiaPMN1",
3237
+ "OMSPMN1": "OMSPMN1",
3238
+ "RUSFEDPMS1": "RUSFEDPMS1",
3239
+ "CRFCReserved": "CRFCReserved",
3240
+ "GSRPMN1": "GSRPMN1",
3241
+ "KOREAPMS1": "KOREAPMS1",
3242
+ "MARAWAPMN1": "MARAWAPMN1",
3243
+ "COMRAPMS1": "COMRAPMS1",
3244
+ "COMRACRFC1": "COMRACRFC1",
3245
+ "CMMPMN1": "CMMPMN1",
3246
+ "NORIPMN1": "NORIPMN1",
3247
+ "TOMLPMN1": "TOMLPMN1",
3248
+ "BGRPMS1": "BGRPMS1",
3249
+ "COMRAPMN1": "COMRAPMN1",
3250
+ "PMNReserved": "PMNReserved"
3251
+ }
3252
+ },
3253
+ "layer": {
3254
+ "keyword": "layer",
3255
+ "enum": {
3256
+ "CFC Reserved Areas": "CFC Reserved Areas",
3257
+ "CFC Exploration Areas": "CFC Exploration Areas",
3258
+ "PMN Reserved Areas": "PMN Reserved Areas",
3259
+ "PMN Exploration Areas": "PMN Exploration Areas",
3260
+ "PMS Exploration Areas": "PMS Exploration Areas"
3261
+ }
3262
+ }
3263
+ }
3264
+ },
2802
3265
  "public-isa-layers": {
2803
- "name": "ISA layers",
2804
- "description": "These represent the areas currently leased by the International Seabed Authority (ISA) for exploration of polymetallic nodules, polymetallic sulfides, and cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts in the high seas. Each polygon represents a 15-year contract with a mining contractor and sponsoring country for the exploration of minerals. None of these areas are currently leased for exploitation (i.e. commercial mining), though these are the same regions that will be mined if exploitation contracts are ever approved by the ISA. The ISA is the intergovernmental United Nations body that is tasked with both protecting the international seabed alongside managing any mineral-resources-related activity in the area. ",
3266
+ "name": "ISA Areas by Resource Type",
3267
+ "description": "This layer shows the areas managed by the International Seabed Authority across all ocean regions and seabed mineral resource types. \n\nExploration areas are those that have been licensed to States or individual contractors sponsored by a State for exploration of mineral resources under a 15-year contract. This enables the contract holder to conduct seabed surveys and environmental studies to assess the resource and region. These are the areas that could ultimately become licensed for exploitation if a State or contractor were to apply for a commercial exploitation permit. \n\nReserved areas are those that have been set aside by the ISA on behalf of developing nations to safeguard opportunity and access to these common heritage resources in the future. \n\nAreas of Particular Environmental Interest (APEI): These areas are protected from future exploitation of mineral resources to safeguard biodiversity and ecosystem health. The Regional Environmental Management Plan (REMP) of the International Seabed Authority initially established nine APEIs, but four more have been added as of December 2021. A total of thirteen APEIs have been designated by the ISA to date, protecting nearly 2 million square kilometers of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone in the Pacific Ocean. \n\nCFC Exploration Areas: Cobalt-rich ferromanganese crust resource areas licensed for exploration under the International Seabed Authority.\n\nCFC Reserved Areas: Cobalt-rich ferromanganese crust resource areas reserved under the International Seabed Authority.\n\nClarion-Clipperton Zone Management Area: This area encompasses the entire management region of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone of the Eastern Pacific Ocean, including all exploration areas, reserved areas, and areas of particular environmental interest. The CCZ spans 4.5 million square kilometers between Hawai’i and Mexico. \n\nPMN Exploration Areas: Polymetallic nodule resource areas licensed for exploration by the International Seabed Authority.\n\n\nPMN Reserved Areas: Polymetallic nodule resource areas reserved under the International Seabed Authority.\n\nPMS Exploration Areas: Polymetallic sulphide resource areas licensed for exploration by the International Seabed Authority.",
2805
3268
  "schema": {
2806
3269
  "label": {
2807
3270
  "keyword": "label",
2808
3271
  "enum": {
2809
- "Clarion-Clipperton Zone management area": "Clarion-Clipperton Zone management area",
2810
- "Areas of particular environmental interest within the Clarion-Clipperton Zone": "Areas of particular environmental interest within the Clarion-Clipperton Zone",
2811
- "CFC Exploration Areas": "CFC Exploration Areas",
2812
3272
  "CFC Reserved Areas": "CFC Reserved Areas",
2813
3273
  "PMN Exploration Areas": "PMN Exploration Areas",
3274
+ "PMS Exploration Areas": "PMS Exploration Areas",
2814
3275
  "PMN Reserved Areas": "PMN Reserved Areas",
2815
- "PMS Exploration Areas": "PMS Exploration Areas"
2816
- }
2817
- },
2818
- "layer": {
2819
- "keyword": "layer",
2820
- "enum": {
2821
- "GIS-CCZ-Management-Areas — CCZ_Management_Areas.shp copy": "GIS-CCZ-Management-Areas — CCZ_Management_Areas.shp copy",
2822
- "ISAwebsite_APEIs — ISAwebsite_APEIs Dissolved": "ISAwebsite_APEIs — ISAwebsite_APEIs Dissolved",
2823
- "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasCRFC — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasCRFC Dissolved": "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasCRFC — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasCRFC Dissolved",
2824
- "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasCRFCres — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasCRFCres Dissolved": "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasCRFCres — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasCRFCres Dissolved",
2825
- "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMN — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMN Dissolved": "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMN — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMN Dissolved",
2826
- "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMNres — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMNres Dissolved": "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMNres — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMNres Dissolved",
2827
- "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMS — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMS Dissolved": "ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMS — ISAwebsite_fclContractAreasPMS Dissolved"
3276
+ "Areas of particular environmental interest within the Clarion-Clipperton Zone": "Areas of particular environmental interest within the Clarion-Clipperton Zone",
3277
+ "Clarion-Clipperton Zone management area": "Clarion-Clipperton Zone management area",
3278
+ "CFC Exploration Areas": "CFC Exploration Areas"
2828
3279
  }
2829
3280
  }
2830
3281
  }
@@ -2876,6 +3327,10 @@
2876
3327
  "name": "Mexico VMS (Fishing vessels)",
2877
3328
  "description": "Dataset for VMS Mexico (Public)"
2878
3329
  },
3330
+ "public-mid-atlantic-isa-claim-areas": {
3331
+ "name": "Mid-Atlantic ISA License Areas",
3332
+ "description": "This layer depicts the ISA license areas for seabed mining on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, which contain polymetallic sulfides. Exploration leases in this region are currently held by France, Russia, and Poland."
3333
+ },
2879
3334
  "public-mp-atlas": {
2880
3335
  "name": "MPAs (MPAtlas)",
2881
3336
  "description": "<p><a href=\"https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abf0861/\" target=\"_blank\" >The MPA Guide</a > is intended to fill a gap in existing MPA classification and assessment tools to help determine how likely MPAs are to deliver the desired conservation outcomes. Over the past few years, the MPAtlas team and key collaborators have applied The MPA Guide framework to MPAs around the world to develop a clearer picture of global marine protection, which includes a recent study establishing a baseline for global \"30x30\" targets - Publication: <a href=\"https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/conl.13020\" target=\"_blank\" >Ocean Protection Quality is Lagging Behind Quantity</a >. MPAtlas is the online repository for MPA Guide assessments and associated data. Stage of Establishment represents where the MPA is in its process of being an MPA. <u>Proposed/Committed</u>: The intent to create an MPA is made public. <u>Designated</u>: MPA is established/recognized through legal means or other authoritative rulemaking. <u>Implemented</u>: MPA is acknowledged to be operation ‘in the water’ with plans for management activated. <u>Actively managed</u>: MPA management is ongoing, with monitoring, periodic review and adjustments made as needed to achieve biodiversity conservation and other ecological and social goals. Level of Protection represents the extent to which the MPA protected from seven main types of human activities and is likely to generate positive biodiversity outcomes. <u>Fully Protected</u>: No impact from extractive or destructive activities is allowed, and all abatable impacts are minimized. <u>Highly Protected</u>: Only light extractive activities are allowed that have low total impact, and all other abatable impacts are minimized. <u>Lightly Protected</u>: Some protection of biodiversity exists, but extractive or destructive activities that can have moderate to significant impact are allowed. <u>Minimally Protected</u>: Extensive extraction and other activities with high total impact are allowed, but the site can still be considered an MPA under the IUCN protected area definition and provides some conservation benefit. Some areas allow activities that have an impact so large that they are incompatible with the conservation of biodiversity, as defined by the IUCN. For more information, please visit <a href=\"https://mpatlas.org/\" target=\"_blank\">https://mpatlas.org/</a>. Each assessed MPA has a score card that describes its stage of establishment and level of protection, as well as more details about the components that contributed to these assessments. Note: The MPAtlas dataset does not contain boundaries for all global MPAs, only those assessed against MPA quality frameworks. </p>",
@@ -2919,17 +3374,13 @@
2919
3374
  "name": "Marine Protection Zone",
2920
3375
  "description": "90% of EEZ"
2921
3376
  },
3377
+ "public-northwest-pacific-isa-claim-areas": {
3378
+ "name": "Northwest Pacific ISA License Areas",
3379
+ "description": "This layer depicts the ISA license areas for seabed mining in the Northwestern Pacific, which primarily contain resources from cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts and polymetallic nodules. Several countries hold exploration leases in this region including China, Japan, Russia, and South Korea."
3380
+ },
2922
3381
  "public-norway-fishing-effort": {
2923
3382
  "name": "Norway VMS",
2924
- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The Norwegian Directorate of Fisheries. Data is collected using Norway’s vessel monitoring system via satellites and is published on a three-day delay containing information on vessels’ location, speed, course, and movement. Global Fishing Watch analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity.” It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity,” “fishing” or “fishing effort,” as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
2925
- "schema": {
2926
- "flag": {
2927
- "keyword": "flag",
2928
- "enum": {
2929
- "NOR": "NOR"
2930
- }
2931
- }
2932
- }
3383
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The Norwegian Directorate of Fisheries. Data is collected using Norway’s vessel monitoring system via satellites and is published on a three-day delay containing information on vessels’ location, speed, course, and movement. Global Fishing Watch analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity.” It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity,” “fishing” or “fishing effort,” as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques"
2933
3384
  },
2934
3385
  "public-norway-presence": {
2935
3386
  "name": "Norway VMS",
@@ -2948,11 +3399,49 @@
2948
3399
  },
2949
3400
  "public-norway-vessel-identity-fishing": {
2950
3401
  "name": "Norway VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
2951
- "description": "Dataset for VMS Norway (Public)"
3402
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Norway (Public)",
3403
+ "schema": {
3404
+ "selfReportedInfo.geartypes.name": {
3405
+ "keyword": "geartypes",
3406
+ "enum": {
3407
+ "DREDGE_FISHING": "DREDGE_FISHING",
3408
+ "DRIFTING_LONGLINES": "DRIFTING_LONGLINES",
3409
+ "FISHING": "FISHING",
3410
+ "FIXED_GEAR": "FIXED_GEAR",
3411
+ "POLE_AND_LINE": "POLE_AND_LINE",
3412
+ "POTS_AND_TRAPS": "POTS_AND_TRAPS",
3413
+ "PURSE_SEINES": "PURSE_SEINES",
3414
+ "SEINERS": "SEINERS",
3415
+ "SET_GILLNETS": "SET_GILLNETS",
3416
+ "SET_LONGLINES": "SET_LONGLINES",
3417
+ "TRAWLERS": "TRAWLERS",
3418
+ "TROLLERS": "TROLLERS"
3419
+ }
3420
+ }
3421
+ }
2952
3422
  },
2953
3423
  "public-norway-vessel-identity-non-fishing": {
2954
3424
  "name": "Norway VMS (Non Fishing Vessels)",
2955
- "description": "Dataset for VMS Norway (Public)"
3425
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Norway (Public)",
3426
+ "schema": {
3427
+ "selfReportedInfo.geartypes.name": {
3428
+ "keyword": "geartypes",
3429
+ "enum": {
3430
+ "DREDGE_FISHING": "DREDGE_FISHING",
3431
+ "DRIFTING_LONGLINES": "DRIFTING_LONGLINES",
3432
+ "FISHING": "FISHING",
3433
+ "FIXED_GEAR": "FIXED_GEAR",
3434
+ "POLE_AND_LINE": "POLE_AND_LINE",
3435
+ "POTS_AND_TRAPS": "POTS_AND_TRAPS",
3436
+ "PURSE_SEINES": "PURSE_SEINES",
3437
+ "SEINERS": "SEINERS",
3438
+ "SET_GILLNETS": "SET_GILLNETS",
3439
+ "SET_LONGLINES": "SET_LONGLINES",
3440
+ "TRAWLERS": "TRAWLERS",
3441
+ "TROLLERS": "TROLLERS"
3442
+ }
3443
+ }
3444
+ }
2956
3445
  },
2957
3446
  "public-paa-duke": {
2958
3447
  "name": "PAAS",
@@ -2964,11 +3453,33 @@
2964
3453
  },
2965
3454
  "public-panama-vessel-identity-fishing": {
2966
3455
  "name": "Panama VMS (Public Fishing Vessels)",
2967
- "description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Public)"
3456
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Panama (Public)",
3457
+ "schema": {
3458
+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
3459
+ "keyword": "imo"
3460
+ },
3461
+ "selfReportedInfo.nationalRegisterNumber": {
3462
+ "keyword": "nationalRegisterNumber"
3463
+ },
3464
+ "selfReportedInfo.ssvid": {
3465
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
3466
+ }
3467
+ }
2968
3468
  },
2969
3469
  "public-panama-vessel-identity-non-fishing": {
2970
3470
  "name": "Panama VMS (Public Non fishing vessels)",
2971
- "description": "Dataset for VMS Panama - Carriers (Public)"
3471
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Panama - Carriers (Public)",
3472
+ "schema": {
3473
+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
3474
+ "keyword": "imo"
3475
+ },
3476
+ "selfReportedInfo.nationalRegisterNumber": {
3477
+ "keyword": "nationalRegisterNumber"
3478
+ },
3479
+ "selfReportedInfo.ssvid": {
3480
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
3481
+ }
3482
+ }
2972
3483
  },
2973
3484
  "public-peru-fishing-effort": {
2974
3485
  "name": "Peru VMS",
@@ -3018,7 +3529,7 @@
3018
3529
  "name": "Peru VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
3019
3530
  "description": "Dataset for VMS Peru (Public)",
3020
3531
  "schema": {
3021
- "casco": {
3532
+ "selfReportedInfo.casco": {
3022
3533
  "keyword": "casco",
3023
3534
  "enum": {
3024
3535
  "ACERO NAVAL": "ACERO NAVAL",
@@ -3028,7 +3539,10 @@
3028
3539
  "FIBRA DE VIDRIO": "FIBRA DE VIDRIO"
3029
3540
  }
3030
3541
  },
3031
- "fleet": {
3542
+ "selfReportedInfo.externalId": {
3543
+ "keyword": "externalId"
3544
+ },
3545
+ "selfReportedInfo.fleet": {
3032
3546
  "keyword": "fleet",
3033
3547
  "enum": {
3034
3548
  "industrial": "industrial",
@@ -3036,7 +3550,7 @@
3036
3550
  "not defined": "not defined"
3037
3551
  }
3038
3552
  },
3039
- "origin": {
3553
+ "selfReportedInfo.origin": {
3040
3554
  "keyword": "origin",
3041
3555
  "enum": {
3042
3556
  "Peru": "Peru",
@@ -3045,19 +3559,101 @@
3045
3559
  }
3046
3560
  }
3047
3561
  },
3048
- "public-png-fishing-effort": {
3049
- "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
3050
- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques",
3562
+ "public-pmn-exploration-areas-individual": {
3563
+ "name": "PMN Exploration Areas",
3564
+ "description": "Polymetallic nodules occur across abyssal plains. These nodules can be found at depths from 3000 meters to 6500 meters with high abundance in the Pacific Ocean and the Central Indian Ocean Basin. Nodules form at a rate of 1-3 millimeters per million years as metals from the surrounding water precipitate onto small particles, such as a grain of sand or a fragment of a shell, forming habitat for unique and poorly understood biodiversity. They are primarily composed of manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper, and rare earth elements. Exploration Areas under the International Seabed Authority are areas licensed for exploration of mineral resources to particular States and associated contractors. 75,000 square kilometers are allocated to each contractor for polymetallic nodule Exploration Areas.",
3565
+ "schema": {
3566
+ "act_date": {
3567
+ "keyword": "act_date",
3568
+ "enum": {
3569
+ "985816800000": "985816800000",
3570
+ "1717970400000": "1717970400000"
3571
+ }
3572
+ },
3573
+ "area_key": {
3574
+ "keyword": "area_key"
3575
+ },
3576
+ "contract_id": {
3577
+ "keyword": "contract_id",
3578
+ "enum": {
3579
+ "KOREAPMN1": "KOREAPMN1",
3580
+ "IOMPMN1": "IOMPMN1",
3581
+ "DORDPMN1": "DORDPMN1",
3582
+ "BMJPMN1": "BMJPMN1",
3583
+ "IndiaPMN1": "IndiaPMN1",
3584
+ "TOMLPMN1": "TOMLPMN1",
3585
+ "IFREMERPMN1": "IFREMERPMN1",
3586
+ "BGRPMN1": "BGRPMN1",
3587
+ "BPHDCPMN1": "BPHDCPMN1",
3588
+ "UKSRLPMN2": "UKSRLPMN2",
3589
+ "UKSRLPMN1": "UKSRLPMN1",
3590
+ "YUZHPMN1": "YUZHPMN1",
3591
+ "CIICPMN1": "CIICPMN1",
3592
+ "OMSPMN1": "OMSPMN1",
3593
+ "GSRPMN1": "GSRPMN1",
3594
+ "MARAWAPMN1": "MARAWAPMN1",
3595
+ "CMMPMN1": "CMMPMN1",
3596
+ "NORIPMN1": "NORIPMN1",
3597
+ "COMRAPMN1": "COMRAPMN1"
3598
+ }
3599
+ }
3600
+ }
3601
+ },
3602
+ "public-pmn-reserved-areas-individual": {
3603
+ "name": "PMN Reserved Areas",
3604
+ "description": "Polymetallic nodules occur across abyssal plains. These nodules can be found at depths from 3000 meters to 6500 meters with high abundance in the Pacific Ocean and the Central Indian Ocean Basin. Nodules form at a rate of 1-3 millimeters per million years as metals from the surrounding water precipitate onto small particles, such as a grain of sand or a fragment of a shell, forming habitat for unique and poorly understood biodiversity. They are primarily composed of manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper, and rare earth elements. Reserved Areas under the International Seabed Authority are a critical mechanism to ensure developing countries have access to deep-sea mineral resources in the future. These areas are typically contributed by developed States when they apply for exploration rights.",
3605
+ "schema": {
3606
+ "act_date": {
3607
+ "keyword": "act_date",
3608
+ "enum": {
3609
+ "988322400000": "988322400000",
3610
+ "1617487200000": "1617487200000"
3611
+ }
3612
+ },
3613
+ "area_key": {
3614
+ "keyword": "area_key"
3615
+ },
3616
+ "contract_id": {
3617
+ "keyword": "contract_id",
3618
+ "enum": {
3619
+ "BPHDCPMN1": "BPHDCPMN1",
3620
+ "PMNReserved": "PMNReserved"
3621
+ }
3622
+ }
3623
+ }
3624
+ },
3625
+ "public-pms-exploration-areas-individual": {
3626
+ "name": "PMS Exploration Areas",
3627
+ "description": "Polymetallic sulphides, or seafloor massive sulphides, are formed at hydrothermal vents near mid-ocean ridges and back-arc basins between approximately 1,000 and 4,000 meters in depth. They are formed when superheated, mineral-rich fluids from the Earth’s mantle are rapidly cooled by deep water. Rapid cooling results in dissolved metals in the fluid precipitating as metal sulfides. These sulfides and surrounding polymetallic muds can contain copper, zinc, silver, and gold. For polymetallic sulphides, the exploration area allocated to each contractor is 10,000 square kilometres and consists of 100 blocks. Each block is no greater than 100 square kilometres.",
3051
3628
  "schema": {
3052
- "flag": {
3053
- "keyword": "flag",
3629
+ "act_date": {
3630
+ "keyword": "act_date",
3054
3631
  "enum": {
3055
- "PNG": "PNG",
3056
- "PHL": "PHL"
3632
+ "1474840800000": "1474840800000",
3633
+ "1698098400000": "1698098400000"
3634
+ }
3635
+ },
3636
+ "area_key": {
3637
+ "keyword": "area_key"
3638
+ },
3639
+ "contract_id": {
3640
+ "keyword": "contract_id",
3641
+ "enum": {
3642
+ "KOREAPMS1": "KOREAPMS1",
3643
+ "COMRAPMS1": "COMRAPMS1",
3644
+ "IFREMERPMS1": "IFREMERPMS1",
3645
+ "POLPMS1": "POLPMS1",
3646
+ "RUSFEDPMS1": "RUSFEDPMS1",
3647
+ "BGRPMS1": "BGRPMS1",
3648
+ "IndiaPMS1": "IndiaPMS1"
3057
3649
  }
3058
3650
  }
3059
3651
  }
3060
3652
  },
3653
+ "public-png-fishing-effort": {
3654
+ "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
3655
+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's vessel monitoring (VMS) system via satellites, that contains vessel's identifiers and location, and is published on a five-day delay. Global Fishing Watch infers speed and course for each vessel location and analyzes this data using the same algorithms developed for automatic identification system (AIS) to identify fishing activity and behaviors. The algorithm classifies each broadcast data point from vessels as either apparently fishing or not fishing and shows the former on the Global Fishing Watch’s fishing activity heat map. VMS broadcasts data differently from AIS and may give different measures of completeness, accuracy, and quality. Global Fishing Watch is continually improving its algorithms across all broadcast data formats to algorithmically identify “apparent fishing activity”. It is possible that some fishing activity is not identified or that the heat map may show apparent fishing activity when fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies the terms “fishing activity”, “fishing” or “fishing effort”, as apparent rather than certain. Any and all Global Fishing Watch information about “apparent fishing activity” should be considered an estimate and must be relied upon solely at the user’s discretion. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers and is combined with expert analysis of AIS vessel movement data, resulting in the manual classification of thousands of known fishing events. Global Fishing Watch also collaborates extensively with academic researchers through our research program to share fishing activity classification data and to improve automated classification techniques"
3656
+ },
3061
3657
  "public-png-presence": {
3062
3658
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS",
3063
3659
  "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the The National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. Data is collected using Papua New Guinea's national VMS that is provided by the Fisheries Information and Management System (FIMS). VMS data includes vessel identifiers and location, and is published with a five-day delay.\n\nThe activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking two positions per hour per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's VMS."
@@ -3066,10 +3662,6 @@
3066
3662
  "name": "Papua New Guinea VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
3067
3663
  "description": "Dataset for VMS Papua New Guinea (Public) "
3068
3664
  },
3069
- "public-ports": {
3070
- "name": "Ports",
3071
- "description": "Named ports"
3072
- },
3073
3665
  "public-ports-v1": {
3074
3666
  "name": "Ports v1",
3075
3667
  "description": "Named ports v1"
@@ -3126,8 +3718,8 @@
3126
3718
  "name": "RFMO",
3127
3719
  "description": "Regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs) are international bodies formed by countries with a shared interest in managing or conserving fish stocks in a particular region. Some manage all the fish stocks found in a given area, while others focus on specific highly migratory species, notably tuna. The regional fisheries management organization on the Global Fishing Watch map currently includes the five tuna regional fisheries management organizations. See more detailed <a href='https://globalfishingwatch.org/faqs/reference-layer-sources/' target='_blank' rel=noopener'>metadata information</a> for this layer.",
3128
3720
  "schema": {
3129
- "id": {
3130
- "keyword": "id",
3721
+ "ID": {
3722
+ "keyword": "ID",
3131
3723
  "enum": {
3132
3724
  "APFIC": "APFIC",
3133
3725
  "BOBP-IGO": "BOBP-IGO",
@@ -3171,7 +3763,21 @@
3171
3763
  },
3172
3764
  "public-seagrasses": {
3173
3765
  "name": "Seagrasses",
3174
- "description": "<h2>Overview</h2>\n<ul>\n<li>Seagrasses are a productive ecosystem found globally in shallow marine areas where they provide food and habitat for organisms and play a key role in nutrient cycling. This dataset shows the global distribution of seagrasses.</li>\n<ul>\n<h2>Source</h2>\n<ul>\n <a href='https://data.unep-wcmc.org/datasets/7'>UNEP-WCMC, Short FT (2021). Global distribution of seagrasses (version 7.1). Seventh update to the data layer used in Green and Short (2003). Cambridge (UK): UN Environment World Conservation Monitoring Centre. Data DOI: https://doi.org/10.34892/x6r3-d211. </a></li>"
3766
+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2>\n<ul>\n<li>Seagrasses are a productive ecosystem found globally in shallow marine areas where they provide food and habitat for organisms and play a key role in nutrient cycling. This dataset shows the global distribution of seagrasses.</li>\n<ul>\n<h2>Source</h2>\n<ul>\n <a href='https://data.unep-wcmc.org/datasets/7'>UNEP-WCMC, Short FT (2021). Global distribution of seagrasses (version 7.1). Seventh update to the data layer used in Green and Short (2003). Cambridge (UK): UN Environment World Conservation Monitoring Centre. Data DOI: https://doi.org/10.34892/x6r3-d211. </a></li>",
3767
+ "schema": {
3768
+ "BIO_CLASS": {
3769
+ "keyword": "BIO_CLASS"
3770
+ },
3771
+ "FAMILY": {
3772
+ "keyword": "FAMILY"
3773
+ },
3774
+ "GENUS": {
3775
+ "keyword": "GENUS"
3776
+ },
3777
+ "habitat": {
3778
+ "keyword": "habitat"
3779
+ }
3780
+ }
3175
3781
  },
3176
3782
  "public-seamounts": {
3177
3783
  "name": "Seamounts",
@@ -3186,6 +3792,10 @@
3186
3792
  }
3187
3793
  }
3188
3794
  },
3795
+ "public-south-atlantic-isa-claim-areas": {
3796
+ "name": "South Atlantic ISA License Areas",
3797
+ "description": "This layer depicts the ISA license areas for seabed mining in the South Atlantic Ocean, which contain resources cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts. Brazil is currently the only country holding leases in this region."
3798
+ },
3189
3799
  "public-tristan-seamounts-200-1618586314138": {
3190
3800
  "name": "Depth: -200 m",
3191
3801
  "description": "Depth: -200 m"
@@ -3229,7 +3839,7 @@
3229
3839
  },
3230
3840
  "public-vms-blz-tracks": {
3231
3841
  "name": "Belize VMS",
3232
- "description": "Tracks dataset for VMS Belize (public)"
3842
+ "description": "Tracks dataset for VMS Belize (Public)"
3233
3843
  },
3234
3844
  "public-vms-blz-vessel-identity": {
3235
3845
  "name": "VMS Belize",
@@ -3397,7 +4007,7 @@
3397
4007
  },
3398
4008
  "public-vms-bra-tracks": {
3399
4009
  "name": "Brazil VMS",
3400
- "description": "Tracks dataset for VMS Brazil (public)"
4010
+ "description": "Tracks dataset for VMS Brazil (Public)"
3401
4011
  },
3402
4012
  "public-vms-bra-vessel-identity": {
3403
4013
  "name": "VMS Brazil",
@@ -3421,8 +4031,8 @@
3421
4031
  "source_fleet": {
3422
4032
  "keyword": "source_fleet",
3423
4033
  "enum": {
3424
- "SMALL_FISHERIES": "SMALL_FISHERIES",
3425
- "INDUSTRY": "INDUSTRY"
4034
+ "INDUSTRY": "INDUSTRY",
4035
+ "SMALL_FISHERIES": "SMALL_FISHERIES"
3426
4036
  }
3427
4037
  }
3428
4038
  }
@@ -3434,10 +4044,10 @@
3434
4044
  "source_fleet": {
3435
4045
  "keyword": "source_fleet",
3436
4046
  "enum": {
3437
- "SMALL_FISHERIES": "SMALL_FISHERIES",
4047
+ "AQUACULTURE": "AQUACULTURE",
3438
4048
  "INDUSTRY": "INDUSTRY",
3439
- "TRANSPORT": "TRANSPORT",
3440
- "AQUACULTURE": "AQUACULTURE"
4049
+ "SMALL_FISHERIES": "SMALL_FISHERIES",
4050
+ "TRANSPORT": "TRANSPORT"
3441
4051
  }
3442
4052
  },
3443
4053
  "speed": {
@@ -3467,7 +4077,7 @@
3467
4077
  },
3468
4078
  "public-vms-chl-tracks": {
3469
4079
  "name": "CHILE VMS",
3470
- "description": "Tracks dataset for VMS CHILE (public)"
4080
+ "description": "Tracks dataset for VMS CHILE (Public)"
3471
4081
  },
3472
4082
  "public-vms-chl-vessel-identity": {
3473
4083
  "name": "VMS Chile",
@@ -3491,9 +4101,9 @@
3491
4101
  "source_fleet": {
3492
4102
  "keyword": "source_fleet",
3493
4103
  "enum": {
4104
+ "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS",
3494
4105
  "AVANZADOS": "AVANZADOS",
3495
- "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS",
3496
- "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS"
4106
+ "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS"
3497
4107
  }
3498
4108
  }
3499
4109
  }
@@ -3505,9 +4115,9 @@
3505
4115
  "source_fleet": {
3506
4116
  "keyword": "source_fleet",
3507
4117
  "enum": {
4118
+ "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS",
3508
4119
  "AVANZADOS": "AVANZADOS",
3509
- "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS",
3510
- "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS"
4120
+ "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS"
3511
4121
  }
3512
4122
  },
3513
4123
  "speed": {
@@ -3537,18 +4147,18 @@
3537
4147
  },
3538
4148
  "public-vms-cri-tracks": {
3539
4149
  "name": "Costa Rica VMS",
3540
- "description": "Tracks dataset for VMS Costa Rica (public)"
4150
+ "description": "Tracks dataset for VMS Costa Rica (Public)"
3541
4151
  },
3542
4152
  "public-vms-cri-vessel-identity": {
3543
4153
  "name": "VMS Costa Rica",
3544
4154
  "description": "Vessels (VMS Costa Rica)",
3545
4155
  "schema": {
3546
- "source_fleet": {
4156
+ "selfReportedInfo.source_fleet": {
3547
4157
  "keyword": "source_fleet",
3548
4158
  "enum": {
3549
- "costarica_vms_industrial_longline": "costarica_vms_industrial_longline",
3550
- "costarica_vms_atuneros": "costarica_vms_atuneros",
3551
- "costarica_vms_sardineros": "costarica_vms_sardineros"
4159
+ "ATUNEROS": "ATUNEROS",
4160
+ "AVANZADOS": "AVANZADOS",
4161
+ "SARDINEROS": "SARDINEROS"
3552
4162
  }
3553
4163
  }
3554
4164
  }
@@ -3603,7 +4213,12 @@
3603
4213
  },
3604
4214
  "public-vms-ecu-vessel-identity": {
3605
4215
  "name": "VMS Ecuador",
3606
- "description": "Vessels (VMS Ecuador)"
4216
+ "description": "Vessels (VMS Ecuador)",
4217
+ "schema": {
4218
+ "selfReportedInfo.registryNumber": {
4219
+ "keyword": "registryNumber"
4220
+ }
4221
+ }
3607
4222
  },
3608
4223
  "public-vms-nor-fishing-effort": {
3609
4224
  "name": "VMS Norway",
@@ -3723,7 +4338,18 @@
3723
4338
  },
3724
4339
  "public-vms-pan-vessel-identity": {
3725
4340
  "name": "VMS Panama",
3726
- "description": "Vessels (VMS Panama)"
4341
+ "description": "Vessels (VMS Panama)",
4342
+ "schema": {
4343
+ "selfReportedInfo.externalId": {
4344
+ "keyword": "externalId"
4345
+ },
4346
+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
4347
+ "keyword": "imo"
4348
+ },
4349
+ "selfReportedInfo.ssvid": {
4350
+ "keyword": "ssvid"
4351
+ }
4352
+ }
3727
4353
  },
3728
4354
  "public-vms-per-fishing-effort": {
3729
4355
  "name": "VMS Peru",
@@ -3767,7 +4393,8 @@
3767
4393
  "keyword": "origin",
3768
4394
  "enum": {
3769
4395
  "Foreign": "Foreign",
3770
- "PER": "PER"
4396
+ "PER": "PER",
4397
+ "": ""
3771
4398
  }
3772
4399
  },
3773
4400
  "source_fleet": {
@@ -3801,7 +4428,10 @@
3801
4428
  "name": "VMS Peru",
3802
4429
  "description": "Vessels (VMS Peru)",
3803
4430
  "schema": {
3804
- "hull": {
4431
+ "selfReportedInfo.externalId": {
4432
+ "keyword": "externalId"
4433
+ },
4434
+ "selfReportedInfo.hull": {
3805
4435
  "keyword": "hull",
3806
4436
  "enum": {
3807
4437
  "ACERO NAVAL": "ACERO NAVAL",
@@ -3811,23 +4441,83 @@
3811
4441
  "FIBRA DE VIDRIO": "FIBRA DE VIDRIO"
3812
4442
  }
3813
4443
  },
3814
- "origin": {
4444
+ "selfReportedInfo.origin": {
3815
4445
  "keyword": "origin",
3816
4446
  "enum": {
3817
- "Peru": "Peru",
3818
- "Foreign": "Foreign"
4447
+ "PERU": "PERU",
4448
+ "FOREIGN": "FOREIGN"
3819
4449
  }
3820
4450
  },
3821
- "sourceFleet": {
4451
+ "selfReportedInfo.sourceFleet": {
3822
4452
  "keyword": "sourceFleet",
3823
4453
  "enum": {
3824
- "industrial": "industrial",
3825
- "artisanal": "artisanal",
3826
- "not defined": "not defined"
4454
+ "": "",
4455
+ "ARTISANAL": "ARTISANAL",
4456
+ "INDUSTRIAL": "INDUSTRIAL",
4457
+ "SMALL-SCALE": "SMALL-SCALE"
4458
+ }
4459
+ }
4460
+ }
4461
+ },
4462
+ "public-vms-plw-fishing-effort": {
4463
+ "name": "VMS Palau",
4464
+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <p> Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) data for Palau is provided by the Palau National Marine Sanctuary. The data is collected via satellite and includes information on vessels' identity, location, speed, and course. It is published with a 3-day delay, and historical data is available from 2021 onward. </p> <p> Please note that given the lower polling rates of VMS compared to AIS, estimates for apparent fishing activity may be less accurate. We are currently improving our fishing models to be better suited to VMS data. </p> <h2>Access & Availability</h2> <p> Vessel names and tracks are visible to public users, but tracks cannot be downloaded. If you require data access beyond what is publicly available, please contact our support team at support@globalfishingwatch.org. </p> <p> If you notice missing data on the map, it may be due to a VMS data outage. We are currently working on better ways to communicate these outages clearly within the platform. If you have any questions regarding gaps in data, please do not hesitate to reach out to our support email. </p>",
4465
+ "schema": {
4466
+ "distance_from_port_km": {
4467
+ "keyword": "distance_from_port_km",
4468
+ "enum": {
4469
+ "0": "0",
4470
+ "1": "1",
4471
+ "2": "2",
4472
+ "3": "3",
4473
+ "4": "4",
4474
+ "5": "5"
4475
+ }
4476
+ }
4477
+ }
4478
+ },
4479
+ "public-vms-plw-presence": {
4480
+ "name": "VMS Palau Presence",
4481
+ "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <p> Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) data for Palau is provided by the Palau National Marine Sanctuary. The data is collected via satellite and includes information on vessels' identity, location, speed, and course. It is published with a 3-day delay, and historical data is available from 2021 onward. </p> <p> Please note that given the lower polling rates of VMS compared to AIS, estimates for apparent fishing activity may be less accurate. We are currently improving our fishing models to be better suited to VMS data. </p> <h2>Access & Availability</h2> <p> Vessel names and tracks are visible to public users, but tracks cannot be downloaded. If you require data access beyond what is publicly available, please contact our support team at support@globalfishingwatch.org. </p> <p> If you notice missing data on the map, it may be due to a VMS data outage. We are currently working on better ways to communicate these outages clearly within the platform. If you have any questions regarding gaps in data, please do not hesitate to reach out to our support email. </p>",
4482
+ "schema": {
4483
+ "speed": {
4484
+ "keyword": "speed",
4485
+ "enum": {
4486
+ "<2": "<2",
4487
+ "2-4": "2-4",
4488
+ "4-6": "4-6",
4489
+ "6-10": "6-10",
4490
+ "10-15": "10-15",
4491
+ "15-25": "15-25",
4492
+ ">25": ">25"
4493
+ }
4494
+ },
4495
+ "vessel_type": {
4496
+ "keyword": "vessel_type",
4497
+ "enum": {
4498
+ "FISHING": "FISHING",
4499
+ "NON_FISHING": "NON_FISHING",
4500
+ "SUPPORT": "SUPPORT",
4501
+ "CARRIER": "CARRIER",
4502
+ "RESEARCH": "RESEARCH",
4503
+ "": ""
3827
4504
  }
3828
4505
  }
3829
4506
  }
3830
4507
  },
4508
+ "public-vms-plw-tracks": {
4509
+ "name": "Palau VMS",
4510
+ "description": "Tracks dataset for VMS Palau (Public)"
4511
+ },
4512
+ "public-vms-plw-vessel-identity": {
4513
+ "name": "VMS Palau",
4514
+ "description": "Vessels (VMS Palau)",
4515
+ "schema": {
4516
+ "selfReportedInfo.imo": {
4517
+ "keyword": "imo"
4518
+ }
4519
+ }
4520
+ },
3831
4521
  "public-vms-png-fishing-effort": {
3832
4522
  "name": "VMS Papua New Guinea",
3833
4523
  "description": "<h2>Overview</h2> <p> Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) data for Papua New Guinea is provided by the National Fisheries Authority of Papua New Guinea. The data is collected via satellite and includes information on vessels' identity, location, speed, and course. It is published with a 5-day delay, and historical data is available from 2023 onward. </p> <p> Please note that given the lower polling rates of VMS compared to AIS, estimates for apparent fishing activity may be less accurate. We are currently improving our fishing models to be better suited to VMS data. </p> <h2>Access & Availability</h2> <p> Vessel names and tracks are visible to public users, but tracks cannot be downloaded. If you require data access beyond what is publicly available, please contact our support team at support@globalfishingwatch.org. </p> <p> If you notice missing data on the map, it may be due to a VMS data outage. We are currently working on better ways to communicate these outages clearly within the platform. If you have any questions regarding gaps in data, please do not hesitate to reach out to our support email. </p>",