Description: The Tidal Restriction layer represents the network and connectivity impacts of tidal restrictions in the Puget Sound Large River Deltas created using regional data, remotely sensed aerial imagery, and oblique shoreline imagery depicted as polylines. The CFS Tidal Restriction network is represented by polylines digitized at a 1:1000 scale using regional data, remote sensed aerial imagery (Hexagon Imagery Program 0.3 m 4-band aerial imagery collected during summer leaf on conditions from August to September in 2017), and oblique shoreline imagery (DOE). Features were classified in a two-tiered nested structure that included a primary structure type and water crossing structure type (where applicable). Where features were not present in the regional data, aerial imagery was used to determine the feature type for primary and water crossing structures, or the feature was called Unknown. This database also contains details on feature type (e.g., road, dike/levee, culvert, bridge), status (e.g., present, removed, abandoned, breached), feature existence certainty, tidal connectivity impacts and certainty, fish passage and fishways, physical feature attributes (e.g., lengths, widths, elevations), feature installation and modifications, and review status, as well as whether the feature was copied from a regional data layer or identified using remotely sensed aerial imagery. These classifications were assigned using the regional data and aerial imagery and rely on CFS staff interpretation and pre-determined classification rules for connectivity and feature type assignments where regional data were lacking.
Description: The Tidal Restriction layer represents the network and connectivity impacts of tidal restrictions throughout Puget Sound created using regional data, remotely sensed aerial imagery, and oblique shoreline imagery depicted as polylines. Polylines were digitized at a 1:1000 scale using regional data, aerial imagery, and oblique shoreline imagery (DOE). Features were classified in a two-tiered nested structure that included a primary structure type and water crossing structure type (where applicable). Where features were not present in the regional data, aerial imagery was used to determine the feature type for primary and water crossing structures, or the feature was called Unknown. This database also contains details on feature type (e.g., road, dike/levee, culvert, bridge), status (e.g., present, removed, abandoned, breached), feature existence certainty, tidal connectivity impacts and certainty, fish passage and fishways, physical feature attributes (e.g., lengths, widths, elevations), and review status, as well as whether the feature was copied from a regional data layer or identified using remotely sensed aerial imagery. These classifications were assigned using the regional data and aerial imagery and rely on CFS staff interpretation and pre-determined classification rules for connectivity and feature type assignments where regional data were lacking.
Description: The Tidal Wetland network represents the current and potential tidal wetland habitat network as polygons and their tidal connectivity determined using the Tidal Restriction network, remotely sensed aerial imagery, SHSTMP tidal wetland habitat extent and feature polygons (NOAA 2011; 2016), and Pacific Marine and Estuarine Fish Habitat Partnership (PMEP) tidal exceedance polygons (PMEP 2018). The maps of current and potential tidal wetland habitat were updated using the spatial database of the tidal restriction network developed in this project, SHSTMP tidal wetland habitat extent, feature polygons, and overwater structures (NOAA 2011; 2016; 2019), and Pacific Marine and Estuarine Fish Habitat Partnership (PMEP) tidal exceedance polygons (PMEP 2018). Tidal restrictions were buffered and used to segment PMEP wetland polygons into individual polygons, to associate tidal restriction features, feature types, and tidal connectivity ratings to polygons of tidal wetland habitat. Tidal wetland connectivity ratings were determined using the Tidal Restriction network and the SHSTMP tidal wetland habitat features to assess pathways of tidal movement and were assigned as Completely Restricted, Significantly Restricted, Partially Restricted, Unrestricted, or Unknown. Tidal wetlands were classified by both their tidal feature connectivity and landscape connectivity with certainty ratings. The feature tidal connectivity classified the tidal connectivity of the feature based on the tidal connectivity to that feature given the immediately downstream tidal restriction features. Feature tidal connectivity was determined by the downstream feature allowing tidal connectivity regardless of upstream or landward tidal restrictions connectivity restrictions. The landscape tidal connectivity classified the tidal connectivity of the wetland feature based on its connectivity to the delta as a whole. The landscape tidal connectivity of a feature was determined by the connectivity rating of the landscape wetlands and the downstream tidal restriction features.
Description: The tidally influenced habitat extents are represented as polygons and their tidal connectivity determined using the Tidal Restriction network, aerial imagery, and Pacific Marine and Estuarine Fish Habitat Partnership (PMEP) draft tidal exceedance polygons. To exclude neritic and ocean zones of the PMEP extent, the PMEP was clipped to exclude areas that were 1,000-foot seaward of the Beach Strategies NGF shoreline. A union function was then used to segment the working PMEP wetland extent with the NWIFC Statewide Intertidal Areas dataset, to separately classify intertidal areas into nearshore deep and shallow habitats. The tidally influenced extent habitats were updated using the spatial database of the tidal restriction network developed in this project, feature polygons, and overwater structures, and PMEP draft tidal exceedance polygons. Tidal restrictions were buffered and used to segment the PMEP polygons into individual polygons, to associate tidal restriction features, feature types, and tidal connectivity ratings to polygons of tidally influenced extent. Tidal connectivity ratings were determined using the Tidal Restriction network and were assigned as Completely Tidally Restricted, Significantly Tidally Restricted, Partially Tidally Restricted, Unrestricted Non-tidal, or Unknown. Tidally influenced extents were classified by both their tidal feature connectivity and landscape connectivity with certainty ratings. The feature tidal connectivity classified the tidal connectivity of the feature based on the tidal connectivity to that feature given the immediately downstream tidal restriction features. Feature tidal connectivity was determined by the downstream feature allowing tidal connectivity regardless of upstream or landward tidal restrictions connectivity restrictions. The landscape tidal connectivity classification considers the connectivity impacts of all the surrounding and downstream (or seaward) tidal restriction features that would impact tidal flow to the polygon. The landscape tidal connectivity of a feature was determined by the connectivity rating of the landscape tidally influenced extents and the downstream tidal restriction features.