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SCIENCE in California’s Natural Community Conservation Plans (NCCPs). Brenda S. Johnson, Ph.D. California Department of Fish and Game. California’s Human Population Growth. Year. Resource Competition. Species at Risk in California. 400+ Listed plants 200+ Listed animals
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SCIENCE in California’sNatural Community Conservation Plans (NCCPs) Brenda S. Johnson, Ph.D. California Department of Fish and Game
Species at Risk in California 400+ Listed plants 200+ Listed animals 200+ Species of Special Concern 1000+ Sensitive plants (CNPS)
CALIFORNIANatural Community Conservation Planning Act (1991, 2000, 2003) California Fish and Game Code Chapter 10, Sections 2800-2835 UNITED STATES Endangered Species Act (1973) Section 10(a) (HCPs) 1982 Five-Point Policy 2000
NCCP/HCP Goals • Protect and recover biological diversity • Prevent future species listings • Allow compatible and appropriate use
Characteristics of Regional Conservation Plans • Locally-driven collaborative partnerships • Broad geographic scope • Ecosystem-based approach • Long-term conservation and management • Monitoring in perpetuity
NCCP Science • Existing information • Planning phase • Implementation
Existing information(consultants and lead agencies) • Previously collected data • Vegetation mapping (GIS) • Other spatial data sets • Local scientific expertise • Museum records • Existing monitoring programs
Planning Phase I(consulting team) • Refinement of existing data • New data collection • Conceptual models • Biological goals and objectives
Planning Phase II(independent science advisors) • Review existing data • Data gaps/research needs • Species ecological requirements • Conceptual models • Biological goals and objectives • Conservation and recovery principles and strategies • Scientific uncertainty and risk • Potential for changed circumstances
Implementation(implementing entity) • adaptive management • effectiveness monitoring • targeted studies
“Monitoring is important, it is difficult, and it is often avoided or overlooked.” Schoonmaker, P. and W. Luscombe. 2005. Habitat Monitoring: An Approach for Reporting Status and Trends for State Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation Strategies. Prepared for Defenders of Wildlife.
CHALLENGES • Monitor covered species andecosystem integrity
CHALLENGES • Monitor covered species andecosystem integrity • Scale up and integrate across
CHALLENGES • Monitor covered species andecosystem integrity • Scale up and integrate across
CHALLENGES • Monitor covered species andecosystem integrity • Scale up and integrate across • Acknowledge high degree of uncertainty
CHALLENGES • Monitor covered species andecosystem integrity • Scale up and integrate across • Acknowledge high degree of uncertainty • Reduce critical knowledge gaps • Scientific capacity • Resources • Flexibility
CHALLENGES • Monitor covered species andecosystem integrity • Scale up and integrate across • Acknowledge high degree of uncertainty • Phase-in monitoring program development
MONITORING PROGRAM PHASES • Phase 1-- Inventory resources and identify relationships • Phase 2 – Pilot test monitoring and resolve critical uncertainties • Phase 3 – Long-term monitoring and adaptive management
CHALLENGES • Monitor covered species andecosystem integrity • Scale up and integrate across • Acknowledge high degree of uncertainty • Phase-in monitoring program development • Stage implementation spatially
We need to • Think before monitoring • Embrace complexity • Use many brains • Be strategic • Have fun with uncertainty • Analyze early and often • Communicate progress
To be monitored for Ambrosia pumilla Natural drivers ClimateChange Current Anthropogenic Drivers Hydrology Fire??? Invasive species cover Habitat alteration from invasive plants Episodic floodscreate openings A Trampling By vehicles, people, livestock C B Soil compaction??? Available habitat Number populations (patches) Historical Anthropogenic Drivers Size of populations Altered hydrology Due to water diversion, dams, mining • Management Responses • Remove exotics (or see C) • Restrict access • Restore flooding or mimic disturbance that causes clearings Habitat loss Due to land use change – urbanization, grazing, agriculture
What have we really learned? • It hurts to think
What have we really learned? • It hurts to think • Too many cooks can spoil the broth
What have we really learned? • It hurts to think • Too many cooks can spoil the broth • It costs a lot!
What have we really learned? • It hurts to think • Too many cooks can spoil the broth • It costs a lot!! • There are trade-offs
What have we really learned? • It hurts to think • Too many cooks can spoil the broth • It costs a lot!!! • There are trade-offs • This is not the ivory tower
What have we really learned? • It hurts to think • Too many cooks can spoil the broth • It costs a lot!!!! • There are trade-offs • This is not the ivory tower • Every monitoring program is different
What have we really learned? • It hurts to think • Too many cooks can spoil the broth • It costs a lot!!!!! • There are trade-offs • This is not the ivory tower • Every monitoring program is different • Close the loop
Progress! • New frontier
Progress! • New frontier • We’ve got data!
Progress! • New frontier • We’ve got data! • We are learning