1 / 18

Future Challenges

This workshop summary highlights the science, management, and partnership strategies needed to address global change challenges. It emphasizes long-term monitoring, integrated studies of multiple stressors, data management, resource management strategies, and the importance of partnerships.

berniceg
Download Presentation

Future Challenges

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Future Challenges The Initial Workshop on USGS/FWS Future Challenges Summary of Global Change Breakout Session

  2. Science Needed to Address Challenge • Long-term Monitoring and Documentation • Indicators • Synthesis and dissemination of existing information • Identify schemes, species, areas already showing short-term change for long-term monitoring due to global change • Integrated Studies of Multiple Stressors

  3. Science Needed to Address Change • Models • Model uncertainty • Reduce uncertainty when possible • Multiple scales • Couple GSMs to ecosystems • Couple GSMs to species level • Land Use/Cover Implications • Ecosystems • Environmental

  4. Science Needed to Address Change • Evolutionary Potential of Species • Nitrogen Availability and Affect • Extinction Projections • Vulnerable species • Impact on ecosystem • Data Management

  5. Science Needed to Address Change • Vulnerable Ecosystems • Tundra • Boreal forests • Temperate forests • Alpine meadows • Barrier islands • Near shore marine systems • Coastal and other wetlands • River stream systems • Island surface water

  6. Science Needed to Address Change • Threshold Conditions for Ecosystem Health • Indicators of change • Fertilization Affect of CO2 • Assessment of secondary affects • Sentinal Species

  7. Resource Management Strategies Needed • Extend/Expand Mission and Functions • Adaptive/Mitigation Management Strategies • Appropriate risk levels • Cost/benefit analyses • Ecosystem Level Goals • Reflect Global Change in Management Plans • CCPs • Ecosystem focus

  8. Resource Management Strategies Needed • Promote Evolutionary Potential of Species • Management Priorities • Eliminate administrivia • Information Dissemination Strategy • Scientists to end users • Build capacity within FWS • Acquisition • Ecosystem Teams (e.g., Chesapeake Bay Team)

  9. Resource Management Strategies Needed • Adaptive Management Strategies • Appropriate risk levels • Cost/benefit analyses • Habitat loss • Long-term time component in management plans • Gap Analysis • On the ground • Land acquisition to mitigate losses

  10. Resource Management Strategies Needed • Science-based Changes in Management Goals • Population goals • Identify Implementation Sites for National Goals

  11. Partnerships • FWS, NPS, BLM manage holistically • NOAA • Coastal status and trends • Others needed for monitoring moving species • States • Tribes • Other Feds • GIO/CIO

  12. Partnerships • Hydrologic monitoring partners/network • State cooperators • Army Corps of Engineers • National Program Coordinators USGS/FWS • FWS ecosystem teams with USGS • International partners • Non-friendly stakeholders

  13. Pearls of Wisdom • Issue is global change of which climate change is a subset • Exchanging spatial for temporal • When you come to a fork in the road, take it!

  14. Top Priorities/Next Steps: Short-term • Develop a Comprehensive Communication Strategy • Existing information • Fact sheets aimed at refuge management • Needs sharing specific to Service programs • Bring NGOs on Board

  15. Top Priorities/Next Steps: Short-term • Establish Collaborative Teams at Regional Scale and Refuge Scale • Identify next steps • Develop an Education Plan • Assess state of knowledge and understanding (on-going) • Establish a Working Group • Distill and clarify next steps

  16. Top Priorities/Next Steps: Short-term • Identify Budget Resources • All short-term/ long-term plans • Provide Guidance, Policies and Framing • Develop Tools/Mechanisms for Capturing and Sharing Lessons Learned • Identify Areas Lacking Science Expertise for Monitoring

  17. Top Priorities/Next Steps: Short-term • Develop Catalog of Studies Already Done • Provide a Synthesis of Information • Holistic, ecosystem scale • Impacts of global change on regional species • Develop a framework • Prepare an ‘06 Budget Initiative • Monitoring strategies across Bureaus

  18. Top Priorities/Next Steps: Long-term • Establish an Inter-Bureau Strategic Think Tank • Build Capacity • Models and applications • Acquiring and translating science information • Track Flora and Fauna • Develop a strategy among agencies and partners • Develop Enabling Legislation for Refuges • Vis a vis global change initiatives

More Related