DocumentCode :
2937264
Title :
Integration of Monitoring and Research in Coastal Waters: Issues for Consideration from a Regulatory Point of View
Author :
Flemer, David A. ; Duke, Thomas W. ; Mayer, Foster L., Jr.
Author_Institution :
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Gulf Breeze, Florida, USA
fYear :
1986
fDate :
23-25 Sept. 1986
Firstpage :
980
Lastpage :
992
Abstract :
Coastal marine ecosystems are characterized by a high degree of natural variability. The weak resolving power of marine science to differentiate between effects ascribable to natural factors versus human intervention often leads to unrealistic expectations of "goods and services" that these ecosystems can provide. This high uncertainty often contributes to faulty communication among scientists, resource managers and the public. We believe that this problem is further enhanced by misunderstandings of the need to intergrate monitoring and research. We explain why monitoring is a retrospective activity and the principal way it can become a prospective activity is through hypothesis framing, testing, and modeling. We describe the logic that underpins a program designed to characterize the limits of applicability of extrapolation from laboratory data to the field. This interactive, iterative process couples concepts of monitoring and research so that the research question and method are linked to spatial and temporal scales of ecological variability. Without such considerations, important ecological relationships remain unspecified, thus precluding meaningful approaches to management of such complex but valuable ecosystems.
Keywords :
Degradation; Ecosystems; Environmental management; Impedance; Laboratories; Monitoring; Resource management; Sea measurements; Testing; Water resources;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS '86
Conference_Location :
Washington, DC, USA
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS.1986.1160501
Filename :
1160501
Link To Document :
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