@globalfishingwatch/i18n-labels 1.2.50 → 1.2.53

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
package/en/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -513,8 +513,28 @@
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  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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  }
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  },
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+ "private-indonesia-aruna-fishing-effort": {
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+ "name": "Aruna (Fishing Effort)",
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+ "description": "Indonesia Aruna Fishing Effort",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "lat": "lat",
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+ "lon": "lon",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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+ "geartype": {
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+ "keyword": "geartype",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "gillnets": "gillnets",
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+ "longline": "longline",
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+ "traps": "traps",
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+ "purse seine": "purse seine",
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+ "Handline": "Handline"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "private-indonesia-aruna-presence": {
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- "name": "Aruna",
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+ "name": "Aruna (Presence)",
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  "description": "Aruna Presence",
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  "schema": {
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  "lat": "lat",
@@ -584,8 +604,28 @@
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  "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
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  }
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  },
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+ "private-indonesia-ipnlf-fishing-effort": {
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+ "name": "AP2HI-IPNLF (Fishing Effort)",
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+ "description": "Indonesia AP2HI-IPNLF Fishing Effort",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "lat": "lat",
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+ "lon": "lon",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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+ "geartype": {
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+ "keyword": "geartype",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "gillnets": "gillnets",
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+ "longline": "longline",
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+ "traps": "traps",
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+ "purse seine": "purse seine",
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+ "Handline": "Handline"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "private-indonesia-ipnlf-presence": {
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- "name": "AP2HI-IPNLF",
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+ "name": "AP2HI-IPNLF (Presence)",
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  "description": "AP2HI-IPNLF Presence",
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  "schema": {
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  "lat": "lat",
@@ -682,8 +722,28 @@
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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  }
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  },
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+ "private-indonesia-rare-fishing-effort": {
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+ "name": "Rare (Fishing Effort)",
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+ "description": "Indonesia Rare Fishing Effort",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "lat": "lat",
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+ "lon": "lon",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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+ "geartype": {
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+ "keyword": "geartype",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "gillnets": "gillnets",
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+ "longline": "longline",
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+ "traps": "traps",
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+ "purse seine": "purse seine",
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+ "Handline": "Handline"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "private-indonesia-rare-presence": {
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- "name": "Rare",
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+ "name": "Rare (Presence)",
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  "description": "Rare Presence",
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  "schema": {
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  "lat": "lat",
@@ -957,6 +1017,26 @@
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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  }
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  },
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+ "proto-global-encounters-events": {
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+ "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
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+ "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "fields": "fields",
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+ "event_id": "event_id",
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+ "event_end": "event_end",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "event_info": "event_info",
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+ "event_type": {
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+ "keyword": "event_type",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "port": "port"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "event_start": "event_start",
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+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
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+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "public-ais-presence-viirs-match-prototype": {
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  "name": "VIIRS",
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  "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)",
@@ -1761,6 +1841,26 @@
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  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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  }
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  },
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+ "public-global-loitering-events": {
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+ "name": "Loitering Events (AIS)",
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+ "description": "The dataset contains loitering events for AIS",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "fields": "fields",
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+ "event_id": "event_id",
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+ "event_end": "event_end",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "event_info": "event_info",
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+ "event_type": {
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+ "keyword": "event_type",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "port": "port"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "event_start": "event_start",
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+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
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+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "public-global-presence": {
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  "name": "AIS",
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  "description": "Global Fishing Watch uses data about a vessel’s identity, type, location, speed, direction and more that is broadcast using the Automatic Identification System (AIS) and collected via satellites and terrestrial receivers. AIS was developed for safety/collision-avoidance. Global Fishing Watch analyzes AIS data collected from vessels that our research has identified as carriers. The activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking one position per day per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's AIS.",
@@ -2365,4 +2465,4 @@
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  "description": "The WPP-NRI (Wilayah Pengelolaan Perikanan Negara Republik Indonesia) are fisheries management areas for fishing, conservation, research and fisheries development which cover inland waters, archipelagic waters, and territorial seas within and outside the exclusive economic zone of Indonesia.",
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  "schema": {}
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  }
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- }
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+ }
package/es/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -957,6 +957,26 @@
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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  }
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  },
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+ "proto-global-encounters-events": {
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+ "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
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+ "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "fields": "fields",
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+ "event_id": "event_id",
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+ "event_end": "event_end",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "event_info": "event_info",
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+ "event_type": {
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+ "keyword": "event_type",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "port": "port"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "event_start": "event_start",
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+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
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+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "public-ais-presence-viirs-match-prototype": {
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  "name": "VIIRS",
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  "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)",
@@ -1761,6 +1781,26 @@
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  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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  }
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  },
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+ "public-global-loitering-events": {
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+ "name": "Loitering Events (AIS)",
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+ "description": "The dataset contains loitering events for AIS",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "fields": "fields",
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+ "event_id": "event_id",
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+ "event_end": "event_end",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "event_info": "event_info",
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+ "event_type": {
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+ "keyword": "event_type",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "port": "port"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "event_start": "event_start",
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+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
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+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "public-global-presence": {
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  "name": "AIS",
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  "description": "Global Fishing Watch uses data about a vessel’s identity, type, location, speed, direction and more that is broadcast using the Automatic Identification System (AIS) and collected via satellites and terrestrial receivers. AIS was developed for safety/collision-avoidance. Global Fishing Watch analyzes AIS data collected from vessels that our research has identified as carriers. The activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking one position per day per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's AIS.",
package/fr/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -957,6 +957,26 @@
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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  }
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  },
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+ "proto-global-encounters-events": {
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+ "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
962
+ "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
963
+ "schema": {
964
+ "fields": "fields",
965
+ "event_id": "event_id",
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+ "event_end": "event_end",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "event_info": "event_info",
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+ "event_type": {
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+ "keyword": "event_type",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "port": "port"
973
+ }
974
+ },
975
+ "event_start": "event_start",
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+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
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+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
978
+ }
979
+ },
960
980
  "public-ais-presence-viirs-match-prototype": {
961
981
  "name": "VIIRS Match",
962
982
  "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)",
@@ -1761,6 +1781,26 @@
1761
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  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1762
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  }
1763
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  },
1784
+ "public-global-loitering-events": {
1785
+ "name": "Loitering Events (AIS)",
1786
+ "description": "The dataset contains loitering events for AIS",
1787
+ "schema": {
1788
+ "fields": "fields",
1789
+ "event_id": "event_id",
1790
+ "event_end": "event_end",
1791
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1792
+ "event_info": "event_info",
1793
+ "event_type": {
1794
+ "keyword": "event_type",
1795
+ "enum": {
1796
+ "port": "port"
1797
+ }
1798
+ },
1799
+ "event_start": "event_start",
1800
+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
1801
+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
1802
+ }
1803
+ },
1764
1804
  "public-global-presence": {
1765
1805
  "name": "AIS",
1766
1806
  "description": "Global Fishing Watch uses data about a vessel’s identity, type, location, speed, direction and more that is broadcast using the Automatic Identification System (AIS) and collected via satellites and terrestrial receivers. AIS was developed for safety/collision-avoidance. Global Fishing Watch analyzes AIS data collected from vessels that our research has identified as carriers. The activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking one position per day per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's AIS.",
package/id/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -957,6 +957,26 @@
957
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
958
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  }
959
959
  },
960
+ "proto-global-encounters-events": {
961
+ "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
962
+ "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
963
+ "schema": {
964
+ "fields": "fields",
965
+ "event_id": "event_id",
966
+ "event_end": "event_end",
967
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
968
+ "event_info": "event_info",
969
+ "event_type": {
970
+ "keyword": "event_type",
971
+ "enum": {
972
+ "port": "port"
973
+ }
974
+ },
975
+ "event_start": "event_start",
976
+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
977
+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
978
+ }
979
+ },
960
980
  "public-ais-presence-viirs-match-prototype": {
961
981
  "name": "VIIRS Match",
962
982
  "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)",
@@ -1761,6 +1781,26 @@
1761
1781
  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1762
1782
  }
1763
1783
  },
1784
+ "public-global-loitering-events": {
1785
+ "name": "Loitering Events (AIS)",
1786
+ "description": "The dataset contains loitering events for AIS",
1787
+ "schema": {
1788
+ "fields": "fields",
1789
+ "event_id": "event_id",
1790
+ "event_end": "event_end",
1791
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1792
+ "event_info": "event_info",
1793
+ "event_type": {
1794
+ "keyword": "event_type",
1795
+ "enum": {
1796
+ "port": "port"
1797
+ }
1798
+ },
1799
+ "event_start": "event_start",
1800
+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
1801
+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
1802
+ }
1803
+ },
1764
1804
  "public-global-presence": {
1765
1805
  "name": "AIS",
1766
1806
  "description": "Global Fishing Watch uses data about a vessel’s identity, type, location, speed, direction and more that is broadcast using the Automatic Identification System (AIS) and collected via satellites and terrestrial receivers. AIS was developed for safety/collision-avoidance. Global Fishing Watch analyzes AIS data collected from vessels that our research has identified as carriers. The activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking one position per day per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's AIS.",
package/package.json CHANGED
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
1
1
  {
2
2
  "name": "@globalfishingwatch/i18n-labels",
3
- "version": "1.2.50",
3
+ "version": "1.2.53",
4
4
  "license": "MIT",
5
5
  "scripts": {
6
6
  "start": "yarn kill && serve -p 8000 --cors=true",
package/pt/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -957,6 +957,26 @@
957
957
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
958
958
  }
959
959
  },
960
+ "proto-global-encounters-events": {
961
+ "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
962
+ "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
963
+ "schema": {
964
+ "fields": "fields",
965
+ "event_id": "event_id",
966
+ "event_end": "event_end",
967
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
968
+ "event_info": "event_info",
969
+ "event_type": {
970
+ "keyword": "event_type",
971
+ "enum": {
972
+ "port": "port"
973
+ }
974
+ },
975
+ "event_start": "event_start",
976
+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
977
+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
978
+ }
979
+ },
960
980
  "public-ais-presence-viirs-match-prototype": {
961
981
  "name": "VIIRS Match",
962
982
  "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)",
@@ -1761,6 +1781,26 @@
1761
1781
  "firstTransmissionDate": "primeira data de transmissão"
1762
1782
  }
1763
1783
  },
1784
+ "public-global-loitering-events": {
1785
+ "name": "Loitering Events (AIS)",
1786
+ "description": "The dataset contains loitering events for AIS",
1787
+ "schema": {
1788
+ "fields": "fields",
1789
+ "event_id": "event_id",
1790
+ "event_end": "event_end",
1791
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1792
+ "event_info": "event_info",
1793
+ "event_type": {
1794
+ "keyword": "event_type",
1795
+ "enum": {
1796
+ "port": "port"
1797
+ }
1798
+ },
1799
+ "event_start": "event_start",
1800
+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
1801
+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
1802
+ }
1803
+ },
1764
1804
  "public-global-presence": {
1765
1805
  "name": "AIS",
1766
1806
  "description": "Global Fishing Watch uses data about a vessel’s identity, type, location, speed, direction and more that is broadcast using the Automatic Identification System (AIS) and collected via satellites and terrestrial receivers. AIS was developed for safety/collision-avoidance. Global Fishing Watch analyzes AIS data collected from vessels that our research has identified as carriers. The activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking one position per day per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's AIS.",
@@ -513,6 +513,26 @@
513
513
  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
514
514
  }
515
515
  },
516
+ "private-indonesia-aruna-fishing-effort": {
517
+ "name": "Aruna (Fishing Effort)",
518
+ "description": "Indonesia Aruna Fishing Effort",
519
+ "schema": {
520
+ "lat": "lat",
521
+ "lon": "lon",
522
+ "flag": "flag",
523
+ "geartype": {
524
+ "keyword": "geartype",
525
+ "enum": {
526
+ "gillnets": "gillnets",
527
+ "longline": "longline",
528
+ "traps": "traps",
529
+ "purse seine": "purse seine",
530
+ "Handline": "Handline"
531
+ }
532
+ },
533
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
534
+ }
535
+ },
516
536
  "private-indonesia-aruna-presence": {
517
537
  "name": "Aruna",
518
538
  "description": "Aruna Presence",
@@ -584,6 +604,26 @@
584
604
  "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
585
605
  }
586
606
  },
607
+ "private-indonesia-ipnlf-fishing-effort": {
608
+ "name": "AP2HI-IPNLF (Fishing Effort)",
609
+ "description": "Indonesia AP2HI-IPNLF Fishing Effort",
610
+ "schema": {
611
+ "lat": "lat",
612
+ "lon": "lon",
613
+ "flag": "flag",
614
+ "geartype": {
615
+ "keyword": "geartype",
616
+ "enum": {
617
+ "gillnets": "gillnets",
618
+ "longline": "longline",
619
+ "traps": "traps",
620
+ "purse seine": "purse seine",
621
+ "Handline": "Handline"
622
+ }
623
+ },
624
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
625
+ }
626
+ },
587
627
  "private-indonesia-ipnlf-presence": {
588
628
  "name": "IPNLF",
589
629
  "description": "IPNLF Presence",
@@ -682,6 +722,26 @@
682
722
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
683
723
  }
684
724
  },
725
+ "private-indonesia-rare-fishing-effort": {
726
+ "name": "Rare (Fishing Effort)",
727
+ "description": "Indonesia Rare Fishing Effort",
728
+ "schema": {
729
+ "lat": "lat",
730
+ "lon": "lon",
731
+ "flag": "flag",
732
+ "geartype": {
733
+ "keyword": "geartype",
734
+ "enum": {
735
+ "gillnets": "gillnets",
736
+ "longline": "longline",
737
+ "traps": "traps",
738
+ "purse seine": "purse seine",
739
+ "Handline": "Handline"
740
+ }
741
+ },
742
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
743
+ }
744
+ },
685
745
  "private-indonesia-rare-presence": {
686
746
  "name": "Rare",
687
747
  "description": "Rare Presence",
@@ -957,6 +1017,26 @@
957
1017
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
958
1018
  }
959
1019
  },
1020
+ "proto-global-encounters-events": {
1021
+ "name": "Encounter Events. (AIS)",
1022
+ "description": "The dataset contains encounter events with authorizations for AIS. [Fishing-Carriers, Carriers-Fishing, Support-Fishing, Fishing-Support]",
1023
+ "schema": {
1024
+ "fields": "fields",
1025
+ "event_id": "event_id",
1026
+ "event_end": "event_end",
1027
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1028
+ "event_info": "event_info",
1029
+ "event_type": {
1030
+ "keyword": "event_type",
1031
+ "enum": {
1032
+ "port": "port"
1033
+ }
1034
+ },
1035
+ "event_start": "event_start",
1036
+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
1037
+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
1038
+ }
1039
+ },
960
1040
  "public-ais-presence-viirs-match-prototype": {
961
1041
  "name": "VIIRS Match",
962
1042
  "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)",
@@ -1761,6 +1841,26 @@
1761
1841
  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1762
1842
  }
1763
1843
  },
1844
+ "public-global-loitering-events": {
1845
+ "name": "Loitering Events (AIS)",
1846
+ "description": "The dataset contains loitering events for AIS",
1847
+ "schema": {
1848
+ "fields": "fields",
1849
+ "event_id": "event_id",
1850
+ "event_end": "event_end",
1851
+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
1852
+ "event_info": "event_info",
1853
+ "event_type": {
1854
+ "keyword": "event_type",
1855
+ "enum": {
1856
+ "port": "port"
1857
+ }
1858
+ },
1859
+ "event_start": "event_start",
1860
+ "event_vessels": "event_vessels",
1861
+ "event_mean_position": "event_mean_position"
1862
+ }
1863
+ },
1764
1864
  "public-global-presence": {
1765
1865
  "name": "AIS",
1766
1866
  "description": "Global Fishing Watch uses data about a vessel’s identity, type, location, speed, direction and more that is broadcast using the Automatic Identification System (AIS) and collected via satellites and terrestrial receivers. AIS was developed for safety/collision-avoidance. Global Fishing Watch analyzes AIS data collected from vessels that our research has identified as carriers. The activity layer displays a heatmap of vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking one position per day per vessel from the positions transmitted by the vessel's AIS.",
@@ -1923,6 +2023,15 @@
1923
2023
  "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1924
2024
  }
1925
2025
  },
2026
+ "public-indonesia-pelagic-fishing-effort": {
2027
+ "name": "Pelagic",
2028
+ "description": "Indonesia Pelagic Fishing Effort Public Data",
2029
+ "schema": {
2030
+ "lat": "lat",
2031
+ "lon": "lon",
2032
+ "flag": "flag"
2033
+ }
2034
+ },
1926
2035
  "public-indonesia-pelagic-presence": {
1927
2036
  "name": "Pelagic",
1928
2037
  "description": "Pelagic Presence",
@@ -2365,4 +2474,4 @@
2365
2474
  "description": "The WPP-NRI (Wilayah Pengelolaan Perikanan Negara Republik Indonesia) are fisheries management areas for fishing, conservation, research and fisheries development which cover inland waters, archipelagic waters, and territorial seas within and outside the exclusive economic zone of Indonesia.",
2366
2475
  "schema": {}
2367
2476
  }
2368
- }
2477
+ }
package/val/datasets.json CHANGED
@@ -957,6 +957,26 @@
957
957
  "vessel_id": "crwdns9477:0crwdne9477:0"
958
958
  }
959
959
  },
960
+ "proto-global-encounters-events": {
961
+ "name": "crwdns26730:0crwdne26730:0",
962
+ "description": "crwdns26732:0crwdne26732:0",
963
+ "schema": {
964
+ "fields": "crwdns26734:0crwdne26734:0",
965
+ "event_id": "crwdns26736:0crwdne26736:0",
966
+ "event_end": "crwdns26738:0crwdne26738:0",
967
+ "vessel_id": "crwdns26740:0crwdne26740:0",
968
+ "event_info": "crwdns26742:0crwdne26742:0",
969
+ "event_type": {
970
+ "keyword": "crwdns26744:0crwdne26744:0",
971
+ "enum": {
972
+ "port": "crwdns26746:0crwdne26746:0"
973
+ }
974
+ },
975
+ "event_start": "crwdns26748:0crwdne26748:0",
976
+ "event_vessels": "crwdns26750:0crwdne26750:0",
977
+ "event_mean_position": "crwdns26752:0crwdne26752:0"
978
+ }
979
+ },
960
980
  "public-ais-presence-viirs-match-prototype": {
961
981
  "name": "crwdns18684:0crwdne18684:0",
962
982
  "description": "crwdns25946:0crwdne25946:0",
@@ -1761,6 +1781,26 @@
1761
1781
  "firstTransmissionDate": "crwdns10019:0crwdne10019:0"
1762
1782
  }
1763
1783
  },
1784
+ "public-global-loitering-events": {
1785
+ "name": "crwdns26776:0crwdne26776:0",
1786
+ "description": "crwdns26778:0crwdne26778:0",
1787
+ "schema": {
1788
+ "fields": "crwdns26780:0crwdne26780:0",
1789
+ "event_id": "crwdns26782:0crwdne26782:0",
1790
+ "event_end": "crwdns26784:0crwdne26784:0",
1791
+ "vessel_id": "crwdns26786:0crwdne26786:0",
1792
+ "event_info": "crwdns26788:0crwdne26788:0",
1793
+ "event_type": {
1794
+ "keyword": "crwdns26790:0crwdne26790:0",
1795
+ "enum": {
1796
+ "port": "crwdns26792:0crwdne26792:0"
1797
+ }
1798
+ },
1799
+ "event_start": "crwdns26794:0crwdne26794:0",
1800
+ "event_vessels": "crwdns26796:0crwdne26796:0",
1801
+ "event_mean_position": "crwdns26798:0crwdne26798:0"
1802
+ }
1803
+ },
1764
1804
  "public-global-presence": {
1765
1805
  "name": "crwdns25804:0crwdne25804:0",
1766
1806
  "description": "crwdns26360:0crwdne26360:0",