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Science, consensus, and monitoring strategies :

Learn about the art of redesigning a long-term benthic monitoring program guided by well-defined goals and a solid scientific basis. Explore the overview of the program, its evolution over the past 30 years, the current monitoring paradigm and proposed plan, and the importance of monitoring for ecosystem management. Discover the role of benthos as indicators of environmental changes and the necessity of tracking invasive species. Gain insights into the scientific review process and the key objectives of the monitoring program.

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Science, consensus, and monitoring strategies :

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  1. Science, consensus, and monitoring strategies: the art of revising a long-term benthic monitoring program Heather Peterson California Department of Water Resources, Sacramento, CA

  2. Getting to yes is easy when: monitoring program redesign is guided bywell defined program goals and asolid scientific basis

  3. Monitoring program redesign is guided best by well defined program goals and a solid scientific basis 1) Overview of the benthic monitoring program 2) How monitoring goals have shaped the program over the past 30 years 3) The current monitoring paradigm and goals 4) The current proposed monitoring plan and how we expect it to meet our goals 5) Concluding remarks.

  4. IEP Environmental Monitoring Program conducts water quality, physical, and biological monitoring in the upper San Francisco Estuary

  5. Monitoring is funded by the State and Federal government to track changes in water transport, hydrology, chemistry, and biology that might affect the San Francisco Estuary’s ecosystem. SWP and CVP withdraw water from the system

  6. Monitoring program redesign is guided best by well defined program goals and a solid scientific basis 1) Overview of the monitoring program 2) How monitoring goals have shaped the program over the past 30 years 3) The current paradigm and goals 4) The current proposed monitoring plan and how we expect it to meet our goals 5) Concluding remarks.

  7. Benthos were initially expected to be indicators of salinity changes in the estuary Sites with high organism abundance and diversity were favored for monitoring 1975-79 Pacific San Francisco

  8. Improving temporal resolution required reducing the number of sites sampled Sites with high organism abundance and diversity were favored for monitoring 1975-79 A subset of sites were selected to be sampled monthly 1980-95 San Francisco

  9. Electronics could monitor salinity, but invasions showed how important benthos are * * * * The Asian clam (Corbula amurensis) and zebra mussel made tracking invasions priority #1 1996-present Sites with high organism abundance and diversity were favored for monitoring 1975-79 San Francisco

  10. Monitoring program redesign is guided best by well defined program goals and a solid scientific basis 1) Overview of the monitoring program 2) How monitoring goals have shaped the program over the past 30 years 3) The current paradigm and goals 4) The current proposed monitoring plan and how we expect it to meet our goals 5) Concluding remarks.

  11. The current paradigm is shaped by scientific review Define monitoring program goals and objectives • IEP Science Advisory Team • EMP Subject Area Teams • The 2003 program review • Benthic Estuarine Ecology Team Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Provide data that will allow for calculation of mass balances and integration of physical and chemical processes Improve spatial resolution of sampling locations

  12. The current paradigm is shaped by scientific review Define monitoring program goals and objectives • IEP Science Advisory Team • EMP Subject Area Teams • The 2003 program review • Benthic Estuarine Ecology Team Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Conduct a thorough analysis of the historic benthic data Add benthic biomass measurements Provide data that will allow for calculation of mass balances and integration of physical and chemical processes Improve spatial resolution of sampling locations

  13. The current paradigm is shaped by scientific review Define monitoring program goals and objectives • IEP Science Advisory Team • EMP Subject Area Teams • The 2003 program review • Benthic Estuarine Ecology Team Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Detect and track invasive alien species Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Conduct a thorough analysis of the historic benthic data Add benthic biomass measurements Provide data that will allow for calculation of mass balances and integration of physical and chemical processes Improve spatial resolution of sampling locations

  14. The current paradigm is shaped by scientific review Define monitoring program goals and objectives • IEP Science Advisory Team • EMP Subject Area Teams • The 2003 program review • Benthic Estuarine Ecology Team Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Detect and track invasive alien species Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Determine which habitat characteristics drive benthic assemblage composition Conduct a thorough analysis of the historic benthic data Add benthic biomass measurements Add benthic biomass measurements Provide data that will allow for calculation of mass balances and integration of physical and chemical processes Identify species habitat ranges, optima, and seasonal patterns Improve spatial resolution of sampling locations Improve spatial resolution of sampling locations

  15. The current paradigm is shaped by scientific review… and management Define monitoring program goals and objectives • IEP Science Advisory Team • EMP Subject Area Teams • The 2003 program review • Benthic Estuarine Ecology Team Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Detect and track invasive alien species Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Determine which habitat characteristics drive benthic assemblage composition Conduct a thorough analysis of the historic benthic data Add benthic biomass measurements Add benthic biomass measurements Provide data that will allow for calculation of mass balances and integration of physical and chemical processes Identify species habitat ranges, optima, and seasonal patterns Improve spatial resolution of sampling locations Improve spatial resolution of sampling locations • EMP Management: Plan for no budget increases!

  16. Three priorities were identified that could satisfy all demands 1. Preserve continuity of long-term monitoring stations Plan for no budget increases! 2. Improve spatial resolution of sampling location$$ Data Analysis, Research, Special Studies, Proposal Writing, Refinement of Goals + Assessment of Monitoring Costs Balance 3. Add benthic bioma$$ measurements

  17. Why must there be change?

  18. Why must there be change? • Monitoring goals evolve

  19. Why must there be change? • Monitoring goals evolve • Sampling or analytical methods evolve

  20. Why must there be change? • Monitoring goals evolve • Sampling or analytical methods evolve • Scientific understanding of the system evolves

  21. Why must there be change? • Monitoring goals evolve • Sampling or analytical methods evolve • Scientific understanding of the system evolves BUT!! • No monitoring program can satisfy everyone. The program design must focus on the monitoring goals.

  22. Our program’s specific goals • Preserve the continuity of the long-term record • Detect and track invasive species • Document the patterns of assemblage composition at various temporal and spatial scales • Document the patterns of biomass in key species

  23. Monitoring program redesign is guided best by well defined program goals and a solid scientific basis 1) Overview of the monitoring program 2) How monitoring goals have shaped the program over the past 30 years 3) The current paradigm and goals 4)The current proposed monitoring plan and how we expect it to meet our goals 5) Concluding remarks.

  24. 1) Monthly sampling at ‘sentinel’ sites * * * * • Continuity at long-term sites • High temporal resolution • Represent each major habitat region along the axis • Provides context for seasonal sampling

  25. 2) Spatially distributed sampling events • 250 locations • Question-driven design • Sampled Spring and Fall • Provides data for regional averages • Reaches undersampled habitats • Improves detection ofinvasives • Data for habitat preference and environmental models • Overlaps with monthly sampling for temporal context

  26. 3) Adding Biomass to the monitoring data • Historic sample analysis counted individuals, identified to species • Data analyses show that changes in benthic assemblage function correspond to changes in ecosystem function • Biomass data would be used to assess rates and mass transfers associated with benthos

  27. 3) Adding biomass to the monitoring data • Comprehensive biomass measurements are expen$ive! • Little outside funding could be found • Question-based data development • Species known to have large-scale effects • Species that are important in the food web • Species that are important to other studies (opportunistic data development)

  28. Monitoring program redesign is guided best by well defined program goals and a solid scientific basis 1) Overview of the monitoring program 2) How monitoring goals have shaped the program over the past 30 years 3) The current paradigm and goals 4) The current proposed monitoring plan and how we expect it to meet our goals 5) Concluding remarks.

  29. Research and data analysis guided the selection of temporal and spatial scales for the monitoring plan The details will be discussed Thursday at 11:45 Can you teach a long-term benthic monitoring program new tricks? Assessment and redesign to address different scales, by Marc Vayssières

  30. Thank You! • Thanks to IEP EMP (DWR) for supporting my work on the review. • Thanks also to Marc Vayssières (DWR) for data analysis Heather Peterson hapeters@usgs.gov EMP: http://iep.water.ca.gov/emp/

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