220 likes | 367 Views
NPS Natural Resource Condition Assessments: Supporting a Condition-Based Approach To Resource Management in Parks. Webinar 1 (of 2) to Introduce & Showcase National Park Service (NPS) Natural Resource Condition Assessments (NRCAs). Jeff Albright National Coordinator – NPS NRCAs
E N D
NPS Natural Resource Condition Assessments: Supporting a Condition-Based ApproachTo Resource Management in Parks Webinar 1 (of 2) to Introduce & Showcase National Park Service (NPS) Natural Resource Condition Assessments (NRCAs) Jeff Albright National Coordinator – NPS NRCAs August 23, 2012
NPS Natural Resource Condition Assessments (aka NR Condition Assessments or NRCAs) • Webinar 1 (today):Making the case • the “what and why” for NRCAs • guidance and products (intro) • linkage to other NPS programs • Webinar 2 (August 30):Making it work • guidance and products (closer look) • highlights and good examples • keys to a successful outcome Both webinars will be recorded & posted to the NRCA web site
It’s the 21st century. Do you know what condition your park resources are in? • Data vs. Information: Analysis Translation Synthesis = + Data Useful Information • What the public expects from NPS: • Strategic, Transparent, Accountable
It is a dynamic time of change and uncertainty. Still, the basic questions haven’t changed. • What’s most important? • …what are the conditions? • …what are the condition influences? • …what are we doing, what are we planning to do? Similar questions have been raised before: 1) In the 1990’s to help justify NPS “Natural Resource Challenge” funding 2) at the 2003 GWS Meeting (“Integrating Science into Mgmt” session)
By whatever name you choose to give it… A condition-based approach to resource management makes sense. Ecosystem-Based Management Adaptive Management Process Adaptive Management Fact (or Data) Driven Decision Making
Natural Resource Condition Assessments (NRCAs) Evaluate current conditions for a subset of each park’s important natural resources. • Per guidance: • Use indicators and structured frameworks • Rely on existing data and expertise from varied sources • Identify or develop useful ‘reference’ conditions • Take a spatial approach to assessing conditions
1a) Use indicators and structured frameworks Frameworks help guide discussion and identification of focal study resources/indicators. • Examples of framework options: • NPS I&M or Heinz frameworks • Decision support (logic model) frameworks • NatureServe/TNC “Ecological Integrity” framework Considerations: 1) what does the park want? results can often be cross-walked from one framework to another
Use of an Ecosystem Management Decision Support Model (EMDS) for the Wilson’s Creek National Battlefield NRCA
1b) Use indicators and structured frameworks, cont. Choose a suite of resources/indicators that reflect a mix of physical, chemical & biological components. • Focal study resources/indicators might include: • NPS Inventory & Monitoring (I&M) ‘Vital Signs’ • Resources/Values from a park’s Foundation Document • Other things identified by park and resource specialists Considerations: 1) what’s most important? 2) what things are “well suited” to include? (we have data/expertise)
2) Rely on existing data/ expertise – varied sources NRCAs are about synthesis of existing data and knowledge, not new data collection. • Operative guidance: • Look for multiple sources of data and expertise (not just NPS) • Use study methods appropriate to the situation • Document the data, methods, and level of confidence Consideration: Each report is likely to include a range of “more qualitative” to “more quantitative” analyses across focal study resources/indicators
3) Identify or develop useful ‘reference’ conditions Provides a logical, defensible context for evaluating and reporting on current resource conditions. • Types of reference that can be used: • Legal, regulatory, or other “desired” (mgmt based) conditions • Historical data, comparison sites, models (potential conds) • Best professional judgment (as adequately documented) • Considerations: • can be revisited over time; can be a point value, or a range of values • can reflect conditions we want to achieve, or that we want to avoid
Excerpt of Indicator Table from Roosevelt-Vanderbilt National Historic Sites NRCA Biological Integrity
4) Take a spatial approach to assessing conditions Do we have spatially explicit data to evaluate OR can we develop spatial inferences re: conditions? • Options: • Overall ‘condition ratings or scores’ by park areas are an • option if it fits the study framework and the park wants it • Otherwise, many parks still benefit from an informal • summary or synthesis of overall findings by park areas Considerations: 1) Each report is likely to include analyses and reporting that is spatially explicit (or inferred) for some resources/indicators, but not for others 2) Parks ID ‘areas of interest’ for summaries (watersheds, habitats, or… )
Essential Habitat Connectivity at Varied Reporting Scales – from Pinnacles Natl Mon NRCA
What’s included in the final report? All NRCAs use the standard report outline. • NRCA background information (boilerplate) • Park introduction and resource setting • Study scoping and design • Condition reporting (subset of resources/indicators) • Condition summaries (by park areas/topics of interest) • Appendices Consideration: Chap 4 includes specific ‘condition reporting’ elements
How do we know it worked? Each NRCA results in a written report that: • Describes park setting, natural resources, and some existing resource management issues or concerns; • Provides credible reporting on current conditions (trend as possible) for the focal study resources/indicators; • Provides a more holistic interpretation or summary of overall condition findings by park areas and/or topics of management interest
How we do we know it worked, cont. Usefulness is measured at the Park level: • The report and findings are deemed accurate, reliable, and useful by the receiving park! • Among other uses, the NRCA proves especially helpful as that park engages in: • Strategic resource planning– for example, developing a park’s Resource Stewardship Strategy (RSS) • Resource condition reporting– for example, developing a park’s State of the Park Report (SoPR)
54 NRCA Reports Completed & Published; >100 park NRCAs In Progress
NRCA Regional Contacts Alaska: Sara Wesser Intermountain: Patrick Malone Midwest: Carmen Thomson National Capital: Pat Campbell Northeast Region: Charles Roman & Pete Sharpe Pacific West: Marsha Davis Southeast: Dale McPherson
Don’t forget to join us for next week’s webinar: “The Science (and Art) of a Successful Natural Resources Condition Assessment Project” August 30, 2012 • Guidance, products, examples (Albright) • Highlights and examples from two experienced investigator teams: • University of Maryland, Center for Environmental Science (Dennison et al.) • Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota, Geospatial Services (Drazkowski et al.) • Group discussion
Questions? To learn more about NRCAs, download guidance and completed reports, etc.: http://nature.nps.gov/water/nrca/index.cfm