Data on Niue's livestock extracted from census reports
Extracted from Niue's 2018 State of Environment (SoE) Report. Details on bird species found in Niue.
Survey Niue Language. Extracted from Niue's 2018 State of Environment (SOE) Report
Data on Niuean Population extracted from Census for different years
Niue's Freshwater Water Quality - Coliform and E.coli counts
Niue's data on change of language spoken at household level Data was extracted from 2006-20011 Census and Niue's 2018 State of Environment (SOE) Report.
Comparison of live coral cover comparing 1998, 2004 and 2005 for Anono Marine Reserve and Avatele. Source Kronen et al. 2008. Extracted from Niue's 2018 SOE
Comparison of Niue's three dominant algal groups (Red, Green and Brown Algae). Extracted from Niue's 2018 SOE
FAO Agriculture and Fair Trade in Pacific Island Countries. This desk study has been prepared by Winnie Fay Bell and comments were kindly provided by the Pacific Regional Organic Task Force in May 2009
Niue's marine managed areas in Niue. Source Govan et al. 2009 (Govan, H. et al. 2009. Status and potential of locally-managed marine areas in the South Pacific: Meeting nature conservation and sustainable livelihoods targets through wide-spread implementation of LMMAs. Study Report. Component 3A-Project 3A3. Coral Reef Initiatives for the Pacific. SPREP/WWF/WorldFish-Reefbase/CRISP. 95pp + 5 annexes). Other information also extracted from Niue's 2018 State of Environment (SOE) report
Reefs at Risk Revisited is a high-resolution update of the original global analysis, Reefs at Risk: A Map-Based Indicator of Threats to the World’s Coral Reefs. Reefs at Risk Revisited uses a global map of coral reefs at 500-m resolution, which is 64 times more detailed than the 4-km resolution map used in the 1998 analysis, and benefits from improvements in many global data sets used to evaluate threats to reefs (most threat data are at 1 km resolution, which is 16 times more detailed than those used in the 1998 analysis).
AquaMaps are computer-generated predictions of natural occurrence of marine species, based on the environmental tolerance of a given species with respect to depth, salinity, temperature, primary productivity, and its association with sea ice or coastal areas. These 'environmental envelopes' are matched against an authority file which contains respective information for the Oceans of the World. Independent knowledge such as distribution by FAO areas or bounding boxes are used to avoid mapping species in areas that contain suitable habitat, but are not occupied by the species.
Bio-ORACLE is a set of GIS rasters providing geophysical, biotic and environmental data for surface and benthic marine realms. The data are available for global-scale applications at a spatial resolution of 5 arcmin (approximately 9.2 km at the equator).
Linking biodiversity occurrence data to the physical and biotic environment provides a framework to formulate hypotheses about the ecological processes governing spatial and temporal patterns in biodiversity, which can be useful for marine ecosystem management and conservation.
IRENA. 2013. Pacific Lighthouses. Renewable energy opportunities and challenges in the Pacific Island Region. Niue.
SOPAC. 2007. Sustainable and integrated water resource and wastewater management in Pacific Island countries. Niue. SOPAC Miscellaneous Report 641.
National Integrated Waste Management Strategy 2010-2015 for Niue