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Explore the lessons and future prospects of the Bay Area Wetland Ecosystem Goals Project. Learn the basic tenets, questions, steps, and strategies for sustaining regional conservation partnerships.
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Sustaining Regional Partnerships for Conservation: Sharing the Future Joshua N. Collins San Francisco Estuary Institute josh@sfei.org
Lessons from the Bay AreaWetland Ecosystem Goals Project Past Present Future?
Serious Work & Abundant Help • Carl Wilcox, Ca Dept. of Fish and Game, Region 3 • Peggy Olofson, SF Bay Water Board • Mike Monroe, EPA Region 9
Basic Tenets There will be as much change in the future as there was in the past. Whatever we build will be re-built or replaced, or abandoned. The main question is what do we need? The answer keeps changing. 2
Basic Tenets We won’t leave things alone. All natural resources are actively managed or passively impacted to some extent. 1
Basic Tenets Ecosystems don’t care; people do. Knowledgeable people care, and caring people can change the world. Eco-system management is Ego-system management. 2
Basic Questions What do we need to do? “Protect the best; restore the rest!” The best and rest of what? What are the most important eco-services and how can they be managed? 2
Basic Questions How much will it cost? Not as much as the alternatives. We can’t afford not to conserve and restore our basic ecological services for food, shelter, and health. 2
Basic Questions How will we measure progress? Inventory what we have, monitor how it’s doing, assess government response, survey public sentiment. 1
3 Steps to Regional Conservation • Set quantitative regional goals for how much of what kinds of habitat are needed where, and why. The scientific and engineering answers must relate directly to management issues that are clear and dominant. 1
3 Steps to Regional Conservation • Set regional habitat goals. • Adjust policies, programs, and projects as tools to achieve the goals. Managers must be willing and able to change what they do. 1
3 Steps to Regional Conservation • Set regional habitat goals. • Adjust policies, programs, and projects to achieve the goals. • Measure progress toward the goals (and adjust the goals for new ideas). Data fuel adaptive management, and good data are very cost-effective. 1
How to Set Habitat Goals Assemble a team of environmental managers, scientists, and engineers. Find State and Federal leadership. Scientists need to be mindful of budgets and schedules. Managers need to give scientists time to think. 3
How to Set Habitat Goals Define the scope of the regional goals. Regions have natural, social, and practical dimensions. 1
How to Set Habitat Goals Define the big problem and envision the ideal solution. The problem-of-interest is the center of the practical ecosystem. Things that directly affect the problem are part of the solution. Others things lead to other problems. 2
How to Set Habitat Goals Understand the environmental past, the present, and change. History can explain the present and help us forecast the future. History is common ground. The history of a place unites the people who live there. 2
How to Set Habitat Goals Use everything anyone knows. Acknowledge what is known as fact, can be inferred from fact, or is mostly expert guesswork. People who work the land, study the land, or manage the land understand the land better than they understand each other. 2
How to Set Habitat Goals It’s OK to think ecologically. Materials cycle and energy flows across jurisdictional lines, fence lines, and even watershed boundaries. Visualize functions that account for the problem that needs to be solved. 2
How to Set Habitat Goals Make regional maps of the past, present, and needed future habitats. Maps help us think well together about the land and the life it should support. Mapping the future will make goals real. Map more detail than you think you need. 3
How to Implement the Plan Plan for implementation before the goals are set. Focus on project performance in context of ambient status and trends. Provide project conceptual design review. 2
How to Implement the Plan Report frequently to the public. Everyone gets everything all the time. Interim products (even incomplete answers) keep people interested. Public involvement builds public support. 3
In summary … Answer the question: how much of what kinds of habitat are needed where, and why? Make a map of the answer, regardless of jurisdictional boundaries or property lines. Turn public policies, programs, and projects into ways to achieve the goals. Share the vision. Celebrate progress.
Thank You March April July June josh@sfei.org