organ pipe cactus n.m. © d. liggett natural resource challenge i&m program update revitalize...
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Organ Pipe Cactus N.M. © D. Liggett
Natural Resource ChallengeI&M Program Update
Revitalize and expand the natural resource program within the park service and improve park management through greater reliance on scientific knowledge
Park Vital Signs Monitoring
An Effective Program Will:• Enable managers to make better informed
management decisions;• Provide early warning of abnormal conditions in
time to develop effective mitigation measures;• Provide data to convince other agencies and
individuals to make decisions benefiting parks;• Satisfy certain legal mandates;• Provide a means of tracking resource condition and
measuring performance.
“The Secretary shall undertake a program of inventory and monitoring of National Park System resources to establish baseline information and to provide information on the long-term trends in the condition of National Park System resources. The monitoring program shall be developed in cooperation with other Federal monitoring and information collection efforts to ensure a cost-effective approach.”
NATIONAL PARKS OMNIBUS MANAGEMENT ACT OF 1998
“The Secretary shall … assure the full and proper utilization of the results of scientific studies for park management decisions.
The Law:
2001 NPS Management Policies
“Natural systems in the national park system, and the human influences upon them, will be monitored to detect change. The Service will use the results of monitoring and research to understand the detected change and to develop appropriate management actions”.
“The Service will: Identify, acquire, and interpret needed inventory, monitoring, and research, including applicable traditional knowledge, to obtain information and data that will help park managers accomplish park management objectives provided for in law and planning documents.”
“This involves a serious commitment from the leadership of the National Park Service to insist that the superintendents carry out a systematic, consistent, professional inventory and monitoring program, along with other scientific activities, that is regularly updated to ensure that the Service makes sound resource decisions based on sound scientific data”.
(FY2000 Appropriations Language)
Message from Congress:
Source: Rethinking the National Parks for the 21st Century. A Report of the National Park System Advisory Board, July 2001
“A sophisticated knowledge of resources and their condition is essential. The Service must gain this knowledge through extensive collaboration with other agencies and academia, and its findings must be communicated to the public. For it is the broader public that will decide the fate of these resources.”
NPS Advisory Board Report:
Natural resource bibliographyBase cartographic dataGeology mapSoils mapWeather dataAir qualityLocation of air quality monitoring stationsWater body location and classificationWater quality dataVegetation mapSpecies list of vertebrates and vascular plantsSpecies distribution and status of vertebrates and vascular plants of high priority to each park
12 Basic Inventory Datasets
Integrate data sets and make them more available to managers using GIS Theme Manager.
Status of Natural Resource Inventories
• Natural Resource Bibliography– Data compiled for 284 parks
– 145,000 records in database
• GIS Base Cartography data– Products for 248 parks complete or funded
• Soils Maps– 37 parks completed; 117 more underway
• Water Quality data– Baseline assessment reports completed for 225 parks; data in
hand for most other parks
Status of Natural Resource Inventories
• Vegetation Maps Funding increased from $1.1M to $4.1M in FY2001, allowing
29 new project starts ($1.10M USGS, $1.20M FirePro, $1.75M NPS NRC)
14 ongoing projects (total no. = 43) 22 projects completed or nearly completed 2 Alaska parks completed; 5 draft maps; 2 more in progress
• Documented Species Occurrence Documented species lists for higher plants and animals available
for 258 parks NPSpecies database contains 258,405 park-species
combinations 130,293 voucher records; 134,749 observation records; 3,918
records in NPSpecies linked to bibliography
Vital Signs Monitoring Networks
Sequence of Funding Network for Monitoring
• 5 “Year 1” networks– North Coast and Cascades– Northeast Coastal and
Barrier– Heartland– Sonoran Desert– Cumberland/Piedmont
• 7 “Year 2” networks– Central Alaska– National Capital– Northern Colorado Plateau – Mediterranean Coast– Greater Yellowstone – Appalachian Highlands– San Francisco Bay
• 5 “Year 3” networks (52 parks)– Southwest Alaska
– Northeast Temperate
– Southern Colorado Plateau
– Pacific Islands
– Great Lakes
• After That:– Gulf Coast
– Rocky Mountain
– 13 more...
(55 parks)
(46 parks)
Key Features of New Park/Network Key Features of New Park/Network Monitoring ProgramMonitoring Program
• Integrated monitoring program: physical and biological Integrated monitoring program: physical and biological resources including weather, air, water, geoindicators, resources including weather, air, water, geoindicators, T&E species, exotic plants, other flora & faunaT&E species, exotic plants, other flora & fauna
• Integrate NR information with park operations Integrate NR information with park operations including interpretation, maintenance, law enforcementincluding interpretation, maintenance, law enforcement
• Emphasis on making information more useable; tools Emphasis on making information more useable; tools such as Synthesis, GIS Theme Manager, NR Database such as Synthesis, GIS Theme Manager, NR Database template, interconnected web and distributed databasestemplate, interconnected web and distributed databases
(moving away from the stovepipe model)
• Monitoring is a central aspect of park management, performance management, and meeting the NPS mission.
• Funding from the Servicewide I&M Program will only build a core program. Use of existing personnel, base funds, and partnerships are critical to success.
• Monitoring is done primarily to meet the information needs of each park. This necessitates a flexible program with local control to address the most critical information needs of each park and allow parks to build local partnerships.
• Clearly defining the goals and measurable objectives for monitoring at the outset is critical for success. Who is interested in the information and WHY?
• Data Management and reporting are a major, critical component of the overall program.
Key Aspects of the NPS Approach toVital Signs Monitoring
Status on Vital Signs Monitoring
In FY 2002, 12 networks that include 101 of the 270 parks with significant natural resources will receive funding to plan and design an integrated park vital signs program. Another 5 networks (52 parks) will receive initial planning funds.
All 11 prototype monitoring programs (including 22 parks) funded in FY2002.
Servicewide Vision and Implementation Plan in place for parks to develop integrated monitoring programs that address the most critical information needs of each park.
Guidance from NRPC divisions being developed and technical assistance available to assist parks with planning and design. (http://www.nature.nps.gov/im/monitor)
Park Vital Signs Monitoring
“Focus on most significant indicators of long-term ecological trends and highest concerns among the parks in each network”
Funding from Servicewide Program will NOT allow comprehensive monitoring
Initial Steps in Designing a Monitoring Program
• Clear statements of Monitoring Goals and specific Objectives
• Compile/summarize available data and understanding of park ecosystem
• Develop conceptual models
• Select indicators for monitoring and determine the appropriate sampling design and protocols
Do it Right the First Time approach
Indicator Selection
Select Indicators
List Potential Indicators
Establish Priorities
Predict Stress/Response Relationships
Predict Linkages among Components and Processes
STRESSORS:Identify key agents of change
FOCAL RESOURCES:Identify key resources of interest
SYSTEM HEALTH: Identify key properties and processes
Scoping
Conceptual Modeling
Integration
Source: Kurt Jenkins, USGS/BRD Olympic Field StationSource: Kurt Jenkins, USGS/BRD Olympic Field Station