{ "culture": "en-US", "name": "nchs_combined_marine", "guid": "", "catalogPath": "", "snippet": "Hotspots of potential natural capital depletion in marine environments, defined as the overlap between areas with natural capital assets (marine sediment...", "description": "

Hotspots of potential natural capital depletion in marine environments, defined as the overlap between areas with natural capital assets (marine sediment carbon, coral reefs, cold corals, seagrasses, mangroves, saltmarshes, tidal flats, seamounts, cold seeps, and hydrothermal vents) and high human pressure (top 20% values from Halpern et al (2015)). The potential hotspots of natural capital depletion indicate where human activities may be associated with higher risks of ecosystem service loss or degradation. This may, in turn, present higher risks for financial institutions investing in these areas.<\/span><\/span><\/p><\/div><\/div><\/div>", "summary": "Hotspots of potential natural capital depletion in marine environments, defined as the overlap between areas with natural capital assets (marine sediment...", "title": "nchs_combined_marine", "tags": [ "natural-capital", "habitats-and-biotopes", "oceanographic-geographical-features", "sea-regions" ], "type": "Image Service", "typeKeywords": [ "Data", "Service", "Image Service", "ArcGIS Server" ], "thumbnail": "", "url": "https://data-gis.unep-wcmc.org/server", "minScale": 2.95828763795855E8, "maxScale": 288895.277144389, "spatialReference": "GCS_WGS_1984", "accessInformation": "UNEP-WCMC (2021) Hotspots of potential natural capital depletion in marine environments.", "licenseInfo": "

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