Science Inventory

INDICATORS FOR MONITORING AND ASSESSING BIODIVERSITY: A HIERARCHIAL APPROACH

Citation:

Noss, R. INDICATORS FOR MONITORING AND ASSESSING BIODIVERSITY: A HIERARCHIAL APPROACH. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-90/545 (NTIS PB92108117).

Description:

Biodiversity is presently a minor consideration in environmental policy. t has been regarded as too broad and vague a concept to be applied to real world regulatory and management problems. The three primary attributes of biodiversity recognized by Jerry Franklin - composition, structure, and function are expanded into a nested hierarchy that incorporates elements of each attribute at four levels of organization: regional landscape, community- ecosystem, population-species, and genetic. ndicators of each attribute in terrestrial ecosystems, at the four levels of organization, are identified for environmental monitoring purposes. rojects to monitor biodiversity will benefit from a direct linkage to long-term ecological research and a commitment to test hypotheses relevant to biodiversity conservation. eneral guideline is to proceed from the top down, beginning with a coarse-scale inventory of landscape pattern, vegetation, habitat structure and species distributions, then overlaying data on stress levels to identify biologically significant areas at high risk of impoverishment. ntensive research and monitoring can be directed to high-risk ecosystems and elements of biodiversity, while less intensive monitoring is directed to the total landscape. n any monitoring program, particular attention should be paid to specifying the questions that monitoring is intended to answer and validating the relationships between indicators and the components of biodiversity they represent.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:05/24/2002
Record Last Revised:04/12/2004
Record ID: 35833