Download - Science to Support
Science to SupportManagement Decisions Related to Hypoxia in the Northern Gulf of Mexico and Water Quality in the Mississippi River Basin
Herb Buxton, US Geological Survey
A Workshop:
Task Force Organization
Task Force• Coordinating Committee (Implementation)
– Finance/Budget Workgroup
– Monitoring, Modeling and Research Workgroup
– Management Response Workgroup• Point Sources• Non Point Sources• Restoration
Workshop Objective
Develop a Monitoring, Modeling and Research (Science) Strategy in Support of the Task Force Action Plan.
The Science Strategy
A strategy to provide and maintain the scientific information needed to implement the adaptive management framework defined in the Action Plan.
• Management Implementation (Improved), • Monitoring, • Interpretation (including modeling),• Periodic Reporting (including public education), and • Research to improve knowledge and methods.
Adaptive Management
Our Tasks
• Review the Management Questions.
• Compile information on existing activities that contribute to essential monitoring, modeling and research activities;
• Identify information gaps and the activities needed to fill those gaps; and
• Identify coordination mechanisms to assure that information is gathered and delivered to support decision-making.
Management Questions
THE WATERSHED
What are the major sources and causes of excess nutrients within the Mississippi River Basin?
Management Questions
THE GULF
How are Gulf hypoxia and the associated adverse effects exacerbated by specific causal factors and what are the determining mechanisms?
Management Questions
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC
What are the social and economic impacts of deterioration in water quality (nutrients) in the Mississippi Basin and increased hypoxia in the Gulf of Mexico?
Guiding Principles
• Adaptive Management.
• Design monitoring to serve sub-basin management implementation strategies.
• Make maximum use of all ongoing activities.
Guiding Principles
• Take a comprehensive Management approach that utilizes all contributing mitigating
factors.
Farm N Management
Davis Pond Diversion
Reduce PS Discharges
Wetland Rest.
Navigation
Guiding Principles
• Consider all potential causal and mitigating factors.
• Reduce uncertainties in measurements of adverse effects, causal factors, and underlying processes.
• Design monitoring activities to support modeling and other planned interpretations.
Guiding Principles
• Modeling should extrapolate monitoring at representative sites across the Basin.
• Periodic interpretations and reporting.
INPUT
YIELD
INPUT
YIELD
Guiding Principles
• Adopt a policy of broad information dissemination.
• Assure that data and information are consistent and reliable (Quality Assurance).
• Peer Review.
Planning Groups
1. Watershed Monitoring and Reporting (Joe Engeln, MO DNR)
2. Watershed Modeling and Research (Rich Alexander, USGS)
3. Watershed Social and Economic Issues (Marc Ribaudo, USDA)
Planning Groups
4. Gulf Monitoring and Reporting (Rex Herron, NOAA)
5. Gulf Modeling and Research (Kenric Osgood, NOAA)
6. Gulf Social and Economic Issues (Rita Curtis, NOAA)
Workshop Agenda
• Plenary Session• 6 Sessions (Planning Groups)
• 2 Sessions (Watershed and Gulf)• 6 Sessions (Planning Groups) • 2 Sessions (Watershed and Gulf)
• Plenary Session• Writing Team
Day 1
Day 2
Day 3
Workshop Steering Committee
• Wayne Anderson (MN PCA)• Dale Bucks (USDA)• Herb Buxton* (USGS)• Joe Engeln (MO NRD)• Dennis McKenna (IL DOA) • Dugan Sabins (LA DEQ)• Don Scavia* (NOAA)• Chuck Spooner (USEPA) *Co-chairs
Workshop Follow-up
• Writing Team meets Friday to develop draft Science Strategy.
• Workshop progress presented at the Task Force Meeting (December 10th, near Washington D.C.).
• See the WWW for workshop results: http://toxics.usgs.gov/hypoxia_mmr_workshop/
What we do not expect to be doing?
• Interpreting or reinterpreting data.
• Evaluating contributions of various nutrient sources.
• Debating the relative importance of causal factors of Hypoxia.
• Discussing the best management actions to be taken.
What we expect to be doing?
Designing a Strategy that:• Best facilitates those activities.• Is open to changes in approach
dictated by new understanding.• Identifies and addresses areas of
greatest scientific uncertainty.• Identifies areas of greatest
resource needs.
Think Broadly!
Think Incrementally!
Take advantage of intersections disciplines!
Thank You!