Abstract
United States federal regulatory agencies develop indicators and other ecological information tools for a variety of reasons, including providing a framework for supporting decision making that is defensible to Congress and the public. Agencies typically develop indicators for their own specific regulatory or programmatic purposes and coordination with other agencies and other indicator projects is often limited. Here we give an overview of incentives driving the development of indicators at different federal agencies and provide some examples of federally supported monitoring and indicator projects. There has been a trend in management and related indicator projects toward coordinating efforts across larger geographic scales (ecosystem/regional). However, there is currently insufficient institutional leadership to coordinate development of indicators at the national scale.
This article not subject to United States copyright law.
Notes
This article not subject to United States copyright law.
Cohen J. 2004. Personal communication. Office of Policy and Strategic Planning, National Marine Fisheries Service
Environmental Protection Agency [EPA]. 2000a. National water quality inventory report to Congress (305(b) Report)
Environmental Protection Agency [EPA]. 2000b. Stressor identification guidance document
Environmental Protection Agency [EPA]. 2002a. Index of watershed indicators: An overview
Environmental Protection Agency [EPA]. 2002b. Summary of biological assessment programs and biocriteria development for states, tribes, territories, and interstate commissions: Streams and wadeable rivers
Environmental Protection Agency [EPA]. 2003. Draft report on the environment, technical document