@globalfishingwatch/i18n-labels 1.2.6 → 1.2.10

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
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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  {
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  "full-chile-fishing-vessels": {
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- "name": "VMS Chile",
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+ "name": "Chile VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
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  "description": "Dataset for VMS Chile (Public)",
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  "schema": {
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  "id": "id",
@@ -14,13 +14,14 @@
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  },
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  "source": "source",
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  "shipname": "shipname",
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+ "normalized_shipname": "normalized_shipname",
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  "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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  "firstTransmissionData": "firstTransmissionData",
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  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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  }
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  },
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  "full-indonesia-fishing-vessels": {
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- "name": "VMS Indonesia",
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+ "name": "VMS Indonesia (Fishing Vessels)",
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  "description": "Dataset for VMS Indonesia (Public)",
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  "schema": {
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  "id": "id",
@@ -307,6 +308,28 @@
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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  }
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  },
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+ "private-costa-rica-fishing-effort": {
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+ "name": "Costa Rica VMS",
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+ "description": "Description pending",
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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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+ "fleet": {
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+ "keyword": "fleet",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "costarica_vms_industrial_longline": "costarica_vms_industrial_longline",
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+ "costarica_vms_atuneros": "costarica_vms_atuneros",
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+ "costarica_vms_sardineros": "costarica_vms_sardineros"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "hours": "hours",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
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+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
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+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
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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-ecuador-fishing-effort": {
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  "name": "Ecuador VMS",
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  "description": "\nVessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the National Directorate of Aquatic Spaces of the Ecuadorian Navy. Data is collected using Ecuador's vessel monitoring system via satellites and is published on a seven-day delay containing information on vessels’ identity, 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.\n",
@@ -419,6 +442,39 @@
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  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
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  }
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  },
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+ "private-indonesia-zebrax-presence": {
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+ "name": "Coastal Fisheries Indonesia",
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+ "description": "This layer of Global Fishing Watch uses data provided by Rare, Aruna and AP2HI. The data is collected using devices from different providers that tracks location and speed. The information shown represents the vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking all positions transmitted by the vessel's tracking device.",
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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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+ "trap net": "trap net",
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+ "purse seine": "purse seine"
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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-zebrax-vessels": {
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+ "name": "Coastal Fisheries Indonesia",
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+ "description": "This layer of Global Fishing Watch uses data provided by Rare, Aruna and AP2HI. ",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "id": "id",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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+ "source": "source",
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+ "dataset": "dataset",
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+ "geartype": "geartype",
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+ "shipname": "shipname",
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+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "private-panama-fishing-effort": {
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  "name": "Panama VMS",
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  "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data provided by the Panamanian Authority of Aquatic Resources (ARAP). Data is received by Panama’s VMS system via satellite and contains vessel identities, gear type, location, speed, direction and more. Panama’s carrier vessel data is also available here. Each point in the carrier vessel data layer represents a position of the carriers, but not all positions are displayed. Carrier vessel positions are displayed once per day. In the future, we expect to be able to display more positions. Click on a carrier vessel’s position to view the vessel’s complete track. Global Fishing Watch analyzes this data using the same algorithms we developed for automatic identification system (AIS) data 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 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 detection 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,” and “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 detection 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.",
@@ -479,6 +535,7 @@
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  "enum": {
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  "industrial": "industrial",
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  "artisanal": "artisanal",
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+ "small-scale": "small-scale",
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  "not defined": "not defined"
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  }
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  },
@@ -575,6 +632,7 @@
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  "enum": {
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  "industrial": "industrial",
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  "artisanal": "artisanal",
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+ "small-scale": "small-scale",
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  "not defined": "not defined"
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  }
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  },
@@ -615,7 +673,7 @@
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  },
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  "public-bra-onyxsat-fishing-effort": {
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  "name": "Brazil VMS",
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- "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the Brazilian Secretary of Aquaculture and Fisheries. Data is collected using Brazil's vessel monitoring system via satellites and is published on a three-day delay containing information on vessels’ identity, 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.",
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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 known or possible commercial fishing vessels, and applies a fishing detection algorithm to determine “apparent fishing activity based on changes in vessel speed and direction. The algorithm classifies each AIS 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. AIS data as broadcast may vary in completeness, accuracy and quality. Also, data collection by satellite or terrestrial receivers may introduce errors through missing or inaccurate data. Global Fishing Watch’s fishing detection algorithm is a best effort mathematically to identify “apparent fishing activity.” As a result, it is possible that some fishing activity is not identified as such by Global Fishing Watch; conversely, Global Fishing Watch may show apparent fishing activity where fishing is not actually taking place. For these reasons, Global Fishing Watch qualifies designations of vessel fishing activity, including synonyms of the term “fishing activity,” such as “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 is taking steps to make sure fishing activity designations are as accurate as possible. Global Fishing Watch fishing detection algorithms are developed and tested using actual fishing event data collected by observers, combined with expert analysis of 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.",
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  "schema": {
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  "flag": "flag",
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  "geartype": {
@@ -672,13 +730,67 @@
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  }
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  },
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  "public-bra-onyxsat-fishing-vessels": {
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- "name": "VMS Brazil Onyxsat (Fishing Vessels)",
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- "description": "Fishing Vessels (VMS Brazil - Onyxsat)",
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+ "name": "VMS Brazil (Fishing Vessels)",
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+ "description": "Fishing Vessels (VMS Brazil)",
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  "schema": {
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  "id": "id",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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  "source": "source",
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  "dataset": "dataset",
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+ "geartype": {
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+ "keyword": "geartype",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "trawlers": "trawlers",
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+ "drifting_longlines": "drifting_longlines",
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+ "pole_and_line": "pole_and_line",
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+ "line": "line",
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+ "pots_and_traps": "pots_and_traps",
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+ "set_longline": "set_longline",
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+ "fishing": "fishing",
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+ "other_purse_seines": "other_purse_seines",
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+ "set_gillnets": "set_gillnets"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "mainGear": "mainGear",
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  "shipname": "shipname",
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+ "codMarinha": "codMarinha",
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+ "fishingZone": "fishingZone",
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+ "targetSpecies": {
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+ "keyword": "targetSpecies",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "Sardinha-verdadeira e Bonito-listrado": "Sardinha-verdadeira e Bonito-listrado",
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+ "Polvo": "Polvo",
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+ "Caranguejo-vermelho": "Caranguejo-vermelho",
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+ "Sardinha-verdadeira e Anchova": "Sardinha-verdadeira e Anchova",
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+ "peixes diversos": "peixes diversos",
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+ "Sardinha-laje": "Sardinha-laje",
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+ "Pescada-gó": "Pescada-gó",
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+ "Piramutaba e peixes diversos": "Piramutaba e peixes diversos",
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+ "Corvina; Pescadas; Castanha e Abrótea": "Corvina; Pescadas; Castanha e Abrótea",
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+ "Fundo e Superfície": "Fundo e Superfície",
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+ "permissionamento antigo; em processo de conversão": "permissionamento antigo; em processo de conversão",
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+ "Tainhas; Anchova e Serras": "Tainhas; Anchova e Serras",
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+ "Garoupas; Cherne; Sirigado e outros peixes de fundo": "Garoupas; Cherne; Sirigado e outros peixes de fundo",
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+ "Sardinha-verdadeira e Tainha": "Sardinha-verdadeira e Tainha",
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+ "Lagostas": "Lagostas",
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+ "Espadarte - atuns e afins": "Espadarte - atuns e afins",
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+ "Camarão-rosa e peixes diversos": "Camarão-rosa e peixes diversos",
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+ "Pescada Amarela": "Pescada Amarela",
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+ "Peixe-sapo": "Peixe-sapo",
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+ "Piramutaba; Dourada e Gurijuba": "Piramutaba; Dourada e Gurijuba",
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+ "Pargo": "Pargo",
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+ "Serras": "Serras",
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+ "Cavala e Albacorinha": "Cavala e Albacorinha",
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+ "Camarão-sete-barbas": "Camarão-sete-barbas",
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+ "Bonito-listrado": "Bonito-listrado",
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+ "camarões": "camarões",
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+ "Abrótea; Galo e Merluza": "Abrótea; Galo e Merluza",
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+ "peixes demersais": "peixes demersais",
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+ " Camarão-rosa": " Camarão-rosa",
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+ "Dourado - atuns e afins": "Dourado - atuns e afins",
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+ "Albacoras - atuns e afins": "Albacoras - atuns e afins"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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  }
@@ -739,28 +851,30 @@
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  }
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  },
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  "public-chile-fishing-vessels": {
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- "name": "VMS Chile (Fishing vessels)",
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+ "name": "Chile VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
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  "description": "Dataset for VMS Chile (Public)",
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  "schema": {
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  "id": "id",
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- "flag": "flag",
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- "fleet": {
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- "keyword": "fleet",
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- "enum": {
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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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- "source": "source",
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  "shipname": "shipname",
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+ "normalizedShipname": "normalizedShipname",
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+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "public-chile-non-fishing-vessels": {
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+ "name": "Chile VMS (Non fishing Vessels)",
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+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Chile (Public)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "id": "id",
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+ "shipname": "shipname",
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+ "normalizedShipname": "normalizedShipname",
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  "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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- "firstTransmissionData": "firstTransmissionData",
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  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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  }
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  },
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  "public-chile-presence": {
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  "name": "Chile VMS",
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- "description": "This layer uses the Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) data provided by the Panamanian Authority of Aquatic Resources (ARAP). The data is received by Panama’s VMS system via satellite and contains vessel identities, gear type, location, speed, direction and more. Each point in the carrier vessel data layer represents a position of the carriers, but not all positions are displayed. Carrier vessel positions are displayed once per day. Click on a carrier vessel’s position to view the vessel’s complete track.",
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+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data provided by the Chilean government’s fisheries and aquaculture regulator (SERNAPESCA). It is possible to filter Chile’s VMS data for small-scale fishing vessels (<18 meters) and industrial fishing vessels (>18 meters). Note that some vessels are <18 meters but are considered industrial because they were registered in the capture of industrial quotas. SERNAPESCA is also using our map to visualize and track vessel positions for their fleet, including vessels involved in aquaculture. Data is collected using Chile’s VMS via satellites and terrestrial receivers and contains vessel identities, gear type, location, speed, direction and more. Global Fishing Watch analyzes this data using the same algorithms we developed for automatic identification system (AIS) data 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 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 detection 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,” and “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 detection 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.",
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  "schema": {
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  "lat": "lat",
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  "lon": "lon",
@@ -782,6 +896,40 @@
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  "description": "This dataset shows the Mediterranean and Black Sea distribution of cold-water corals using data collected from 1915 to 2014, buffered at ~1km. Occurrence records are given for the subclass Octocorallia (octocorals; also known as Alcyonaria) and four Orders (in Class Anthozoa): Scleractinia (reef-forming corals), Antipatharia (black corals), Zoanthidae (encrusting or button polyps), and Pennatulacea (sea pens). Occurrence records are also available for the order sub-Order Filifera (lace corals) in Class Hydrozoa. References: Freiwald et al. 2017, Freiwald et al 2004. Source: UNEP-WCMC.",
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  "schema": {}
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  },
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+ "public-costa-rica-fishing-effort": {
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+ "name": "Costa Rica VMS",
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+ "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data is provided by the Costa Rican Fisheries and Aquaculture Institute. Data is collected using Ecuador'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.",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "lat": "lat",
904
+ "lon": "lon",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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+ "fleet": {
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+ "keyword": "fleet",
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+ "enum": {
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+ "costarica_vms_avanzados": "costarica_vms_avanzados",
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+ "costarica_vms_atuneros": "costarica_vms_atuneros",
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+ "costarica_vms_sardineros": "costarica_vms_sardineros"
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+ }
913
+ },
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+ "hours": "hours",
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+ "vessel_id": "vessel_id",
916
+ "elevation_m": "elevation_m",
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+ "distance_from_port_m": "distance_from_port_m",
918
+ "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
919
+ }
920
+ },
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+ "public-costa-rica-fishing-vessels": {
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+ "name": "Costa Rica VMS",
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+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Costa Rica (Public)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "id": "id",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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+ "source": "source",
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+ "shipname": "shipname",
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+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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+ }
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+ },
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  "public-dgg_sar_caribe_match_2019": {
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  "name": "SAR with an AIS-matched vessel",
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  "description": "Vessels identified using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and matched to a vessel using automatic identification system (AIS) data. Currently available for 2019. Source: Sentinel-1.",
@@ -813,7 +961,7 @@
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  }
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  },
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  "public-ecuador-fishing-vessels": {
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- "name": "Ecuador VMS",
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+ "name": "Ecuador VMS (Fishing vessels)",
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  "description": "Dataset for VMS Ecuador (Public)",
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  "schema": {
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  "id": "id",
@@ -821,7 +969,21 @@
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  "source": "source",
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  "shipname": "shipname",
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  "nationalId": "nationalId",
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- "normalizedShipname": "normalizedShipname",
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+ "normalized_shipname": "normalized_shipname",
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+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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+ }
976
+ },
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+ "public-ecuador-non-fishing-vessels": {
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+ "name": "Ecuador VMS (Non fishing vessels)",
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+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Ecuador (Public)",
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+ "schema": {
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+ "id": "id",
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+ "flag": "flag",
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+ "source": "source",
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+ "shipname": "shipname",
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+ "nationalId": "nationalId",
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+ "normalized_shipname": "normalized_shipname",
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  "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
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  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
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  }
@@ -882,7 +1044,7 @@
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  }
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  },
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  "public-fd-chlorophyl-palau-v3": {
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- "name": "Chlorophyl Palau",
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+ "name": "Chlorophyll-a concentration",
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  "description": "Chlorophyll-a is the light-harvesting pigment found in all photosynthetic plants. Its concentration in the ocean is used as an index of phytoplankton biomass and, as such, is a key input to primary productivity models. The moderate resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument aboard NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites measures ocean color every day, from which global chlorophyll-a concentrations are derived. Ocean phytoplankton chemically fix carbon through photosynthesis, taking in dissolved carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. Through this process, marine plants capture about an equal amount of carbon as does photosynthesis by land vegetation. Changes in the amount of phytoplankton indicate the change in productivity of the oceans and provide a key ocean link for global climate change monitoring. Scientists use chlorophyll in modeling Earth's biogeochemical cycles such as the carbon cycle or the nitrogen cycle. Additionally, on short time scales, chlorophyll can be used to trace oceanographic currents, jets, and plumes. The 1 kilometer resolution and nearly daily global coverage of the MODIS data thus allows scientists to observe mesoscale oceanographic features in coastal and estuarine environments, which are of increasing importance in marine science studies. Source: NASA Earth Observations.",
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  "schema": {
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  "flag": "flag",
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  },
924
1086
  "public-fd-salinity-mediterranean-v3": {
925
1087
  "name": "Salinity",
926
- "description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: HYCOM.",
1088
+ "description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
927
1089
  "schema": {
928
1090
  "flag": "flag",
929
1091
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
@@ -931,7 +1093,7 @@
931
1093
  },
932
1094
  "public-fd-salinity-niue-v3": {
933
1095
  "name": "Salinity",
934
- "description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: HYCOM.",
1096
+ "description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
935
1097
  "schema": {
936
1098
  "flag": "flag",
937
1099
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
@@ -939,7 +1101,7 @@
939
1101
  },
940
1102
  "public-fd-salinity-palau-v3": {
941
1103
  "name": "Salinity",
942
- "description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: HYCOM.",
1104
+ "description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
943
1105
  "schema": {
944
1106
  "flag": "flag",
945
1107
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
@@ -947,7 +1109,7 @@
947
1109
  },
948
1110
  "public-fd-salinity-tristan-v3": {
949
1111
  "name": "Salinity",
950
- "description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: HYCOM.",
1112
+ "description": "Sea surface salinity is a key parameter to estimate the influence of oceans on climate. Along with temperature, salinity is a key factor that determines the density of ocean water and thus determines the convection and re-emergence of water masses. The thermohaline circulation crosses all the oceans in surface and at depth, driven by temperature and salinity. A global “conveyor belt” is a simple model of the large-scale thermohaline circulation. Deep-water forms in the North Atlantic, sinks, moves south, circulates around Antarctica, and finally enters the Indian, Pacific, and Atlantic basins. Currents bring cold water masses from north to south and vice versa. This thermohaline circulation greatly influences the formation of sea ice at the world’s poles, and carries ocean food sources and sea life around the planet, as well as affects rainfall patterns, wind patterns, hurricanes and monsoons. Source: EU Copernicus Marine Service Information.",
951
1113
  "schema": {
952
1114
  "flag": "flag",
953
1115
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
@@ -1157,6 +1319,28 @@
1157
1319
  }
1158
1320
  }
1159
1321
  },
1322
+ "public-global-sar-presence": {
1323
+ "name": "Radar detections (SAR)",
1324
+ "description": "Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) can detect at-sea vessels and structures greater than approximately 20 meters in length, in any weather conditions.\n\nSAR imaging is one of the power tools of remote sensing. SAR is a satellite-based active sensor that shoots radio waves to the Earth surface and measures the amplitude and phase of the signals that are reflected back from objects on the ground and water. The return signals contain rich information about size, orientation, composition, condition, and texture of the features encountered. These imaging systems overcome any weather condition and illumination level, including clouds or rain, daylight or darkness.They give an advantage over passive satellite sensors, such as electro-optical imagery, which is similar to taking a picture with a camera and relies on sunlight and/or the infrared radiation emitted by objects on the ground. This latter method can be confounded by cloud cover, haze, weather events, and seasonal darkness at high latitudes. SAR by comparison has proven to be the most consistent option for detecting vessels at sea.\n\nHow do we detect vessels with SAR? \n\nWe use SAR imagery from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission of the European Space Agency (ESA), which is sourced from two polar-orbiting satellites (S1A and S1B), to detect all vessels and offshore infrastructure on each scene. Our approach combines a modified version of a well established ship detection method (Constant False Alarm Rate) with modern machine learning to classify the detected vessels into fishing and non-fishing. This detection approach consists of identifying the pixels with a “brightness” level above the mean backscatter of the background, representing the sea clutter around the target.\n\nHow do we match SAR detections to automatic identification system (AIS) transmitters? \n\nAIS transmitters broadcast the vessel’s GPS positions to help nearby vessels avoid collisions, and these AIS messages can be recorded by satellite constellations. Global Fishing Watch has developed a sophisticated system to match available AIS data to respective SAR vessel detections. This matching is done using a probabilistic model that determines AIS-message/SAR-detection pairs based on all available AIS records right before and right after the time the SAR image was taken, as well as the probability of pairing a specific AIS message to any of the vessels appearing on that image.\n\nWhat do the terms AIS matched and AIS unmatched mean? \n\nNot all vessels are required to carry AIS transmitters (e.g. the European Union only requires use of AIS for vessels over 20 meters in length), and vessels engaged in unlawful activity may shut off their AIS transmitters. These vessels are referred to as “dark targets”. This means that for all “AIS matched” SAR detections, we have information available about the detected vessel from its AIS, such as the characteristics of the ship and whether it is fishing or not. On the other hand, all “AIS unmatched” SAR detections correspond to vessels that cannot be tracked with AIS, some of which may be engaged in illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. In any case, unmatched SAR detections provide the missing information about vessel traffic in the ocean.\nSource. We use SAR imagery from ESA’s Sentinel-1 Interferometric Wide swath mode (IW) Level-1 Ground Range Detected (GRD) product, covering all near-shore areas around the world with a resolution of about 20 meters. We process SAR scenes and detect objects using Google Earth Engine platform.",
1325
+ "schema": {
1326
+ "id": "id",
1327
+ "lat": "lat",
1328
+ "lon": "lon",
1329
+ "pos": "pos",
1330
+ "cell": "cell",
1331
+ "htime": "htime",
1332
+ "ssvid": "ssvid",
1333
+ "matched": {
1334
+ "keyword": "Matching",
1335
+ "enum": {
1336
+ "true": "AIS Matched",
1337
+ "false": "AIS Unmatched"
1338
+ }
1339
+ },
1340
+ "timestamp": "timestamp",
1341
+ "confidence": "confidence"
1342
+ }
1343
+ },
1160
1344
  "public-global-support-vessels": {
1161
1345
  "name": "AIS (Support Vessels)",
1162
1346
  "description": "Support vessels from AIS",
@@ -1182,16 +1366,109 @@
1182
1366
  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1183
1367
  }
1184
1368
  },
1185
- "public-global-viirs": {
1369
+ "public-global-viirs-presence": {
1186
1370
  "name": "Night light detections",
1187
1371
  "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. <br/><br/>\n\nThe 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. <br/><br/>\n\nGlobal 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>.<br/><br/>\n\nThose 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 detection. A filtration algorithm has been applied but there may still be some mis-identification. <br/><br/>\n\nThe GFW layer includes quality flags (QF), including a filter to show only detections which NOAA has classified as vessels (QF1).",
1372
+ "schema": {
1373
+ "cel": "cel",
1374
+ "lat": "lat",
1375
+ "lon": "lon",
1376
+ "pos": "pos",
1377
+ "htime": "htime",
1378
+ "radiance": {
1379
+ "keyword": "radiance",
1380
+ "enum": {
1381
+ "1": 1,
1382
+ "2": 2,
1383
+ "3": 3,
1384
+ "4": 4,
1385
+ "5": 5,
1386
+ "6": 6,
1387
+ "7": 7,
1388
+ "8": 8,
1389
+ "9": 9,
1390
+ "10": 10,
1391
+ "11": 11,
1392
+ "12": 12,
1393
+ "13": 13,
1394
+ "14": 14,
1395
+ "15": 15,
1396
+ "16": 16,
1397
+ "17": 17,
1398
+ "18": 18,
1399
+ "19": 19,
1400
+ "20": 20,
1401
+ "21": 21,
1402
+ "22": 22,
1403
+ "23": 23,
1404
+ "24": 24,
1405
+ "25": 25,
1406
+ "26": 26,
1407
+ "27": 27,
1408
+ "28": 28,
1409
+ "29": 29,
1410
+ "30": 30
1411
+ }
1412
+ },
1413
+ "detect_id": "detect_id",
1414
+ "qf_detect": {
1415
+ "keyword": "qf_detect",
1416
+ "enum": {
1417
+ "1": 1,
1418
+ "2": 2,
1419
+ "3": 3,
1420
+ "5": 5,
1421
+ "7": 7,
1422
+ "10": 10
1423
+ }
1424
+ },
1425
+ "timestamp": "timestamp"
1426
+ }
1427
+ },
1428
+ "public-global-viirs": {
1429
+ "name": "VIIRS",
1430
+ "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 detection. 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)",
1188
1431
  "schema": {
1189
1432
  "cel": "cel",
1190
1433
  "lat": "Latitude",
1191
1434
  "lon": "Longitude",
1192
1435
  "pos": "pos",
1193
1436
  "htime": "htime",
1194
- "radiance": "Radiance",
1437
+ "radiance": {
1438
+ "keyword": "radiance",
1439
+ "enum": {
1440
+ "1": 1,
1441
+ "2": 2,
1442
+ "3": 3,
1443
+ "4": 4,
1444
+ "5": 5,
1445
+ "6": 6,
1446
+ "7": 7,
1447
+ "8": 8,
1448
+ "9": 9,
1449
+ "10": 10,
1450
+ "11": 11,
1451
+ "12": 12,
1452
+ "13": 13,
1453
+ "14": 14,
1454
+ "15": 15,
1455
+ "16": 16,
1456
+ "17": 17,
1457
+ "18": 18,
1458
+ "19": 19,
1459
+ "20": 20,
1460
+ "21": 21,
1461
+ "22": 22,
1462
+ "23": 23,
1463
+ "24": 24,
1464
+ "25": 25,
1465
+ "26": 26,
1466
+ "27": 27,
1467
+ "28": 28,
1468
+ "29": 29,
1469
+ "30": 30
1470
+ }
1471
+ },
1195
1472
  "detect_id": "detect_id",
1196
1473
  "qf_detect": {
1197
1474
  "keyword": "Quality flag(s)",
@@ -1261,11 +1538,20 @@
1261
1538
  },
1262
1539
  "public-indonesia-zebrax-presence": {
1263
1540
  "name": "Coastal Fisheries Indonesia",
1264
- "description": "This layer of Global Fishing Watch uses data provided by Rare, Aruna and AP2HI. The data is collected using ZebraX devices that tracks location and speed. The information shown represents the vessel presence.",
1541
+ "description": "This layer of Global Fishing Watch uses data provided by Rare, Aruna and AP2HI. The data is collected using devices from different providers that tracks location and speed. The information shown represents the vessel presence. The presence is determined by taking all positions transmitted by the vessel's tracking device.",
1265
1542
  "schema": {
1266
1543
  "lat": "lat",
1267
1544
  "lon": "lon",
1268
1545
  "flag": "flag",
1546
+ "geartype": {
1547
+ "keyword": "geartype",
1548
+ "enum": {
1549
+ "gillnets": "gillnets",
1550
+ "longline": "longline",
1551
+ "trap net": "trap net",
1552
+ "purse seine": "purse seine"
1553
+ }
1554
+ },
1269
1555
  "vessel_id": "vessel_id"
1270
1556
  }
1271
1557
  },
@@ -1308,7 +1594,7 @@
1308
1594
  "source": "source",
1309
1595
  "shipname": "shipname",
1310
1596
  "nationalId": "nationalId",
1311
- "normalizedShipname": "normalizedShipname",
1597
+ "normalized_shipname": "normalized_shipname",
1312
1598
  "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
1313
1599
  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1314
1600
  }
@@ -1381,6 +1667,17 @@
1381
1667
  "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1382
1668
  }
1383
1669
  },
1670
+ "public-panama-non-fishing-vessels": {
1671
+ "name": "Panama VMS (Non fishing vessels)",
1672
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Panama - Carriers (Public)",
1673
+ "schema": {
1674
+ "id": "id",
1675
+ "shipname": "shipname",
1676
+ "normalized_shipname": "normalized_shipname",
1677
+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
1678
+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1679
+ }
1680
+ },
1384
1681
  "public-peru-fishing-effort": {
1385
1682
  "name": "Peru VMS",
1386
1683
  "description": "Vessel monitoring system (VMS) data provided by the Peruvian Government’s Ministry of Production, Fisheries Sector (PRODUCE). Permission to include Peruvian Data required that a 10 day delay to publishing was implemented. Data is collected using their vessel monitoring system (VMS) via satellites and terrestrial receivers, and contains a vessel’s identity 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 detection 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 detection 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.",
@@ -1393,6 +1690,7 @@
1393
1690
  "enum": {
1394
1691
  "industrial": "industrial",
1395
1692
  "artisanal": "artisanal",
1693
+ "small-scale": "small-scale",
1396
1694
  "not defined": "not defined"
1397
1695
  }
1398
1696
  },
@@ -1429,6 +1727,17 @@
1429
1727
  "distance_from_shore_m": "distance_from_shore_m"
1430
1728
  }
1431
1729
  },
1730
+ "public-peru-fishing-vessels": {
1731
+ "name": "Peru VMS (Fishing Vessels)",
1732
+ "description": "Dataset for VMS Peru (Public)",
1733
+ "schema": {
1734
+ "id": "id",
1735
+ "shipname": "shipname",
1736
+ "normalized_shipname": "normalized_shipname",
1737
+ "lastTransmissionDate": "lastTransmissionDate",
1738
+ "firstTransmissionDate": "firstTransmissionDate"
1739
+ }
1740
+ },
1432
1741
  "public-peru-presence": {
1433
1742
  "name": "Peru VMS Presence",
1434
1743
  "description": "This layer of Global Fishing Watch uses data provided by the Peruvian Government’s Ministry of Production, Fisheries Sector, (PRODUCE). Permission to include Peruvian Data required that a 10 day delay to publishing was implemented. The data is collected using their Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) via satellites and terrestrial receivers, and contains a vessel’s identity gear type, location, speed, direction and more. 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 VMS. \n",
@@ -1441,6 +1750,7 @@
1441
1750
  "enum": {
1442
1751
  "industrial": "industrial",
1443
1752
  "artisanal": "artisanal",
1753
+ "small-scale": "small-scale",
1444
1754
  "not defined": "not defined"
1445
1755
  }
1446
1756
  },
package/en/timebar.json CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
1
1
  {
2
2
  "playback": {
3
3
  "playAnimation": "Play animation",
4
- "pauseAnimation": "Pause animation",
4
+ "pauseAnimation": "Pause Animation",
5
5
  "toogleAnimationLooping": "Toggle animation looping",
6
6
  "moveBack": "Move back",
7
7
  "moveForward": "Move forward",