found: Work cat.: Ecological and economic analyses of marine ecosystems in the Bird's Head Seascape, Papua, Indonesia, 2007:v. 1, p. 5 (At the heart of the Coral Triangle is the Bird's Head Seascape, off the west coast of Papua Province, Indonesia; relatively remote and pristine area, home to about 75% of the world's reef-building coral species, and over 1,000 fish species) p. 7 (Bird's Head Functional Seascape (BHS))
found: Conservation International Web site, Oct. 18, 2007:regions/key marine regions/seascapes (The Papuan Bird's Head Seascape is a coastal and marine region of 183,000 square kilometers (approximately 70,657 square miles) located in northwest Papua Province of Indonesia, that stretches from Teluk Cenderawasih in its eastern reaches to the Raja Ampat archipelago in the west and the FakFak-Kaimana coastline in the south; Seascapes are large, multiple-use marine areas, defined scientifically and strategically, in which government authorities, private organizations, and other stakeholders cooperate to conserve the diversity and abundance of marine life and to promote human well-being.)
found: A globally important marine ecosystem : Papuan Bird's Head Seascape, via WWW, Oct. 18, 2007:PDF pp. 1-2 (The Bird's Head Seascape sits at the epicenter of the so-called "Coral Triangle" region. It is located in northwest Papua, Indonesia, stretching from Teluk Cenderawasih in its eastern reaches to the Raja Ampat archipelago in the west and the FakFak-Kaimana coastline to the south; covering a combined area of over 180,000 km² and more than 2500 islands and submerged reefs; there are already several well-established marine protected areas in the Bird's Head Seascape)
found: NOAA's Coral Reef Information System, via WWW, Oct. 18, 2007:glossary (Papuan Bird's Head Seascape - a coastal and marine region of 183,000 square kilometers (approximately 70,657 square miles) located in northwest Papua Province of Indonesia, that stretches from Teluk Cenderawasih in its eastern reaches to the Raja Ampat archipelago in the west and the FakFak-Kaimana coastline in the south. It is home to more than 1,200 types of reef fishes and nearly 600 species of hard corals, plus whales, sea turtles, crocodiles, giant clams, manta rays, and dugongs. Bird's Head is perhaps one of Earth's richest seascapes)
found: Google search, Oct. 18, 2007(Bird's Head Seascape, a marine area named for the distinctive shape of the peninsula on the northwestern end of Indonesia's Papua province; Bird's Head Seascape off the coast of Indonesia's Papua Province)
notfound: GEOnet, Oct. 18, 2007