Standard Scientific Procedures For Implementing Ecosystem Management On Public Lands

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Standard Scientific Procedures for Implementing


Ecosystem Management on Public Lands
Robert S. Peters, Donald M. Waller, Barry Noon,
Steward T. A. Pickett, Dennis Murphy, Joel Cracraft,
Ross Kiester, Walter Kuhlmann, Oliver Houck, and
William J. Snape III

Summary

Modern ecological ideas, including fundamental principles of conservation biol-


ogy have not yet been fully embraced by federal land management agencies.
Reasons include bureaucratic resistance to new ideas, influence by resource user
groups who put maximum resource production above long-term ecological health
of ecosystems, lack of external accountability by the agencies, and a misperception
by agency personnel that conservation science is poorly developed. The fact that
federal land management agencies often do not gather data or make management
decisions using up-to-date science hinders their ability to ensure the long-term
sustainability of both biological diversity and the specific resources, such as
timber and fodder, for which the lands are managed.
For example, agency managers have often defended conventional patterns of
timber harvest by arguing that the edge habitat they produce is beneficial to
wildlife, even though edges are well known to have multiple deleterious effects
on native, forest-interior species. To prevent such poorly informed management
decisions, agencies must develop mutually compatible, explicit standards that
determine how they will apply modem ecological science to land management.
To facilitate this process, we propose a comprehensive set of standard procedures
for implementing ecosystem management on public lands. These procedures
incorporate our best contemporary understanding of population, community, and
landscape dynamics to efficiently and systematically protect ecosystems and their
constituent biodiversity.

Introduction

Management practices on federal lands have often harmed natural ecosystems,


reducing not only biological diversity but even the resources-such as timber or

320
Standard Scientific Procedures for Implementing Ecosystem Management / 321

grass production- for which the lands are primarily managed. For example, in
many cases, fire suppression on national forests has changed the relative abun-
dances of tree species, increased stand densities, or caused other structural and
compositional changes that increase the probability of disease, fire, and loss of
native species (Wagner and Kay, 1993; Anderson, H. M., 1994). Unwise grazing
policies on Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, and other federal lands
contribute to the endangered or threatened status of many species, including
Sonoran pronghorn (Antilocapra americana sonoriensis), Arizona willow (Salix
arizonica), and desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) (National Wildlife Federation,
1994; USFWS, 1994a). The National Biological Service (1995) found that many
U.S. natural ecosystems are seriously degraded or at risk of total loss. Many of
these, such as Southern California coastal strand, Palouse prairie in the Northwest,
and slash pine rockland in Florida have shrunk by more than 90 percent to
become “critically endangered.”
This unhappy state results from both scientific and institutional causes. Misun-
demanding of ecological principles has led to management decisions that were
often inimical to biological diversity. For example, predators once were seen as
negative influences to be removed (Anderson, S. H., 1995), whereas habitat edges
were seen as universal benefits to be increased (Reid and Miller, 1989; Woodley
et al., 1993). Nor has there been adequate appreciation that ecosystems are highly
interconnected and that management decisions in one place may affect ecological
conditions on other lands. A classic example is how logging can produce silt
that harms the reproduction of salmon far downstream (Pringle and Aumen,
1993). These erroneous assumptions have helped agencies yield to political
pressures to increase production of timber and other resources at the expense of
ecosystem sustainability. For example, by overlooking the essential role that top
predators play in maintaining healthy ecosystems, agencies have been able to
rationalize activities that extirpate them. Likewise, their erroneous conclusion
that edge habitat is universally beneficial allowed them to rationalize excessive
timber harvesting.

Federal Land Management Agencies Have Been Slow to Adopt


Conservation Science

Despite advances in ecology and conservation biology during the past 20 years
that have refuted many ecological myths (Parker, 1993) and provided comprehen-
sive tools for sound ecological management (Christensen, this volume), and even
though agency scientists have been doing some of the best ecological work (e.g.,
on modeling viable population sizes, Ralls and Taylor, this volume), agencies
have-been slow to base management policies on the new science, Scientists and
conservation organizations have been educating, urging, and, in some cases,
suing the agencies responsible for management to require them to collect adequate
biological information and to act on it. For example, in 1992 the Sierra Club
322 / Robert S. Peters, et al.

and other plaintiffs brought an unsuccessful suit against the U.S. Forest Service.
when the agency refused to establish large blocks of mature forest that would
be free of disturbances caused by logging, new roads, or wildlife openings. The
suit complained that the Forest Service had rejected the proposal, and adopted
a plan of ubiquitous fragmentation, without considering negative edge effects.
island biogeography, and other concepts from conservation science (e.g., Noss.
1983; Meffe and Carroll. 1994).
Several factors have contributed to the historical unwillingness or inability of
federal agencies to incorporate up-to-date conservation science in land manage-
ment plans:

Misperceptions about the Quality of Conservation Science.

Resistance by the agencies is sometimes based on the incorrect conclusion


that conservation science is too poorly developed to be dependable. People may
draw this conclusion because they misunderstand the nature of science, mistaking
scientific debate over particular points within the field for a generalized weakness
(Pickett et al., 1994). For example, in the Sierra Club suit mentioned earlier, the
judge concluded that the theory of island biogeography was too poorly substanti-
ated to expect the Forest Service to use it in making decisions about how much
habitat fragmentation to allow during timber production (Reynolds, 1994). He
reached this conclusion partly because there is debate in the scientific literature
over the degree to which the theory of island biogeography can explain patterns
of species richness in habitat remnants, on mountain summits, and on other such
terrestrial “islands” (Simberloff, this volume). The judge did not realize that
scientific debate over the degree to which terrestrial habitat islands approximate
real oceanic islands did not invalidate the basic conclusions, backed up by dozens
of rigorous studies (e.g., White et al., 1990; As et al., 1992; Hansson, 1992a;
Hansson, this volume), that small isolated habitat areas support fewer species
than large ones, and that it is possible to make predictions about which species
or groups of species will disappear first (e.g., Nott and Pimm, this volume). The
inability of the theory to predict precisely how many species will disappear,
given a particular logging pattern on a particular forest, in no way invalidates
the general conclusion that fragmenting a contiguous forest, as was planned for
the Chequamegon, will cause loss of biological diversity (Hansson et al., 1995).

Constituencies for Resource Use.

Arguably the most powerful force against incorporation of conservation science


is pressure from resource-user groups. Historically, agencies have seen their
primary responsibility to be the provision of sufficient resources for hunters.
ranchers, and timber companies (Society of American Foresters, 1993), even if
this comes at the cost of overstocking range lands and overcutting forests. Because
conservation of biodiversity is a relatively new contender for agency concern
Standard Scientific Procedures for Implementing Ecosystem Management / 323

and resources compared with traditional consumptive uses, there are frequently
ideological, political, financial, or other constraints that predispose agencies to
selectively interpret science.

Because the field of conservation biology is so new, with many of its primary
tenets having been developed only within the past 20 years, it has not yet
fully permeated government agencies (e.g., Hein, 1995). Conservation biology
challenges individual agency professionals to think in new ways and asks the
agencies themselves to develop and institutionalize new priorities.

Lack of Standardization.

No policy exists within and across agencies that sets standards for data suffi-
ciency and types of studies required. Need exists for something analogous to the
proposed interagency fire suppression policy (U.S. DOI and U.S. DOA, 1995)
or the interagency standards for water quality assessment (Guru and Muir, 1994).

American jurisprudence holds that courts will not substitute their judgment
about how resources should be managed unless the ageny's decision is without
rational basis. In the words of the judge in the Sierra Club case, “in areas of
scientific uncertainty the agency’s choice of methodology is entitled to consider-
able deference” (Reynolds, 1994). This legal principle, called “agency discretion,”
means that agencies may make resource management decisions even if they are
contrary to generally accepted principles of conservation science.

New Opportunities Exist for Helping Federal Agencies Manage Lands


More Responsibly

Despite the political pressures that encourage retrogressive action by the agencies,
the imperiled state of many ecosystems on federal lands has forced the agencies
to recognize that change is necessary. Federal and state agencies are trying to
modify their approaches to natural resource management to ensure long-term
sustainability of natural ecosystems and biological diversity. This period of reas-
sessment offers scientists a unique opportunity to help agencies develop policies
to use sound science in plans for sustainable use of natural ecosystems.
Many agency efforts to revise resource policies center around “ecosystem
management.” Ecosystem management generally implies turning away from sin-
gle-use, single-species management, and turning toward management. designed
to ensure the health of ecosystems. The goal is to use natural resources in a
sustainable way that does not threaten the integrity of the natural ecosystems that
provide the resources. Ecosystem management and related issues are discussed in
several chapters in this volume, including Barrett and Barrett, Christensen, Ewel,
Gordon et al., Meyer, Thompson, and Wiens, among others. Also see Alverson
et al. (1994); Noss and Cooperrider (1994); and Crow et al. (1994).
Ecosystem management demands a much broader vision than have historical
management practices. It requires that managers

widen their focus from a few species of economic or other value to all
the species within the ecosystem;
focus on understanding and preserving not only species per se but also
the interactions between species that collectively maintain the ecosystem
and provide ecosystem services (e.g., Meyer, this volume);
enlarge the management time frame to include long-term ecosystem
processes, such as cycles of forest fires and succession to old growth;
widen the planning process to encompass entire ecosystems, communi-
ties. and populations, including portions extending off-site onto adjacent
nonfederal lands;
pursue solutions to threats that originate off-site, such as nonnative pests
and pollution;
accommodate the needs of nontraditional users of federal lands, including
nonconsumptive users; and
use adaptive management.

To effectively manage ecosystems and other elements of biological diversity


that extend across management boundaries, managers of ecologically linked land
units must cooperate in planning and implementation of management procedures.
Joint planning will depend on collection of scientific data that are mutually
compatible among land units.

Suggested Standard Procedures for Biodiversity Assessments

To assist in the development of acceptable scientific procedures, in this section


we recommend standardized procedures that we consider essential to any manage-
ment planning program1. The procedures are organized as four main activities:

1
This paper is the report of a workshop convened in July, 1994, by Defenders of Wildlife at the
University of Wisconsin, Madison. Workshop attendees were conservation scientists and conservation
law experts charged with developing a set of standard procedures that state and federal land managers
could use to manage for biological diversity. The guidelines presented in this paper were developed
at the workshop to help managers use up-to-date conservation science so that the impacts of timber
harvesting, livestock grazing, and other types of resource extraction would not harm native ecosystems
and species.
Standard Scientific Procedures for Implementing Ecosystem Management / 325

inventory and identification, evaluation of threats to diversity, management de-


sign, and monitoring and evaluating effects of management (Sections A, B, C, and
D). Under these headings we identify and explain the importance of identifying
communities and species at risk, choosing appropriate indicator species, measur-
ing and mapping abundances, ranges, and other indicators of species and ecosys-
tem health, calculating minimum viable population sizes for key species, calculat-
ing minimum dynamic areas for communities (defined later), and measuring edge
effects. Agency procedures also should include methods for continued monitoring
of ecosystem health so that short- and long-term negative impacts of management
actions can be identified and rectified.
To be effective these procedures must be based on the best available science.
Further, they should be standardized among agencies so that they can be consis-
tently implemented across public lands. At present, agencies are frequently using
divergent classification systems and data collection methods, as exemplified by
the distinct ecosystem classification systems now being developed by the Forest
Service and the Fish and Wildlife Service (CRS. 1994).
We realize that the standards offered below constitute an ambitious program.
Because resources are limited, managers, scientists, and policy makers will have
to jointly decide on which of the steps we recommend should receive highest
priority. After priorities have been set, they should be reviewed regularly to make
sure they are still appropriate given changing conditions and new information.

A. Inventory and Identification

As the first phase of their effort to assess the biotic status of their land base.
managers2 should assemble relevant and essential background information. Man-
agers should

1. Prepare Maps of the Physical Environment.

Managers should prepare maps of topography, land forms, soils, climate and
other factors that indicate the land’s potential for supporting various types of
biological communities. One important use of this information is to predict which
kinds of natural vegetation could return to sites that are now substantially dis-
turbed.

2. Prepare Maps of Biological Communities and Habitats.

Land managers need accurate and up-to-date information on the location and
composition of the communities and habitats they oversee. Therefore
326 / Robert S. Peters, et al.

l For each biotic community, managers should compile comprehensive


species lists for as many taxonomic groups as possible, incorporating
data from herbaria, museums, state natural heritage databases, and other
sources. Species lists should include not onlv the conspicuous tree and
vertebrate groups but also herbaceous plants, cryptogams, invertebrates,
and fungi.
l Communities and successional stages should be mapped to fine scale
(e.g., 100-m resolution) and their ecological condition assessed. A finely
detailed classification scheme should be used that can distinguish among
communities and successional stages that differ significantly in species
or structural composition.
l In cases where present vegetation does not reflect potential vegetation,
for example where grazing has changed the plant species mix from that
which occurred historically, both present and potential vegetation should
be mapped.
l Data should be gathered for ecologically related land both inside and
outside the management unit.
l Data on both the biotic community and the physical environment should
be entered into Geographic Information Systems (GIS) capable of dis-
playing them as electronic maps.
l Methods of identifying, classifying, formatting and mapping data should
be standardized within and among agencies.

3. Identify Communities, Species and Populations Known to Be at Risk.

Managers should flag for special concern communities and species that may
be imperiled in their planning area. These include
a communities recognized by the National Biological Service (Noss et al.,
1995), heritage programs, other federal or state agencies, scientific bod-
ies. or private conservation organizations (Grossman et al., 1994; Noss
and Peters, 1995) as rare, substantially reduced in area, seriously de-
graded, or in imminent peril of substantial loss regionally or throughout
their ranges;
. species recognized by heritage programs, state or federal agencies, or
others as threatened, endangered, or otherwise of special concern, or
known or suspected to be declining in abundance across a significant
fraction of their range, or known to be suffering a loss of range; and
a communities or species known to decline in the presence of human
activity; introduced species, toxics, or other threats present in the planning
area. These include species sensitive to habitat fragmentation or edge ef-
fects.
Standard Scientific Procedures for Implementing Ecosystem Management / 327

Agencies should collect alI available data about these communities and species
regarding their distribution, abundance, and responses to particular types of
disturbance. In the case of species, assessment should include identification of
specific habitat requirements. Where possible, distributions should be mapped.

4. Select, Inventory, and Monitor Indicator Species (ISs).

In addition to identifying species at risk, managers should identify other species


that can serve as indicators of ecosystem structure and function and whose
responses to changing conditions can be used to assess the success of management.
Managers should include indicator species from all the following groups:

l species endemic to the area;


l species that require particular habitat or landscape features;
a species sensitive to environmental change;
l top carnivores or other species that require large blocks of habitat;
l keystone species that are known to have or suspected to have major
influences on community structure or ecosystem function;
a species that are economically important, such as sport fish or game
species;
9 introduced species with substantial impact on natural communities; and
l species that exhibit metapopulation structure (e.g., Hanski, this volume;
Wiens, this volume) or have ephemeral sub-populations that depend on
disturbance (e.g., Hansson, this volume).

For these indicator species, agencies should collect and map where possible
all available data regarding distribution, abundance, habitat needs, habitat speci-
ficity, and responses to particular types of disturbance.

5. Map the Hisorical Distributions and Characterize the Historical


Compositions of Natural Communities.

Qualitative information and quantitative data should be gathered on distribution


patterns from the pre-European settlement period both for the management unit
and for ecologically related areas outside the unit. These data should be incorpo-
rated in GIS or otherwise mapped.

6. Characterize Current and Historical Disturbance Regimes.

Because disturbance regimes play a key role in determining patterns of biologi-


cal diversity (Pickett and White, 1985; Huston, 1994), managers should identify
and characterize patterns of disturbance from presettlement times to the present.
As far as possible, information should include the frequency, intensity, areal
328 / Robert S. Peters, et al.

extent, and distribution of each disturbance type. Current and recent anthropogenic
disturbances, including grazing, timber harvest, and roads, should be characterized
for comparison to the pre-European disturbance patterns that shaped the natu-
ral communities.

7. Determine How the Biological Communities Respond to Disturbances.

Managers should understand how disturbance patterns affect community struc-


ture and composition. For each major community type, managers should de-
termine

l the immediate effects of the disturbances,


l the species composition and dynamics of communities that colonize
after disturbance,
l the nature and composition of the intermediate successional communities
that follow,
l the length of time necessary for "recovery" to old-growth conditions
via succession,
l the predictability of successional sequences, and
l how disturbance size and intensity affect successional patterns.

Managers should pay particular attention to how indicator species and endan-
gered and other “at risk" species respond to the type and intensity of both natural
and anthropogenic disturbance, including rates and mechanisms of reestab-
lishment.

8. Identify Area Needs and Edge Effects.

Managers need information on how habitat fragmentation and reduction in


area affect the viability of natural communities. They should

identify species and communities known to be sensitive to edge effects,


limited habitat area, or genetic isolation. When data are not available
for these species from the management area or its vicinity, managers
should refer to published studies from other sites, particularly on closely
related species.
collect available data-on how species diversity changes with area for
major community and habitat types. These data are necessary to assess-
how decreases in acreage of a particular community may cause loss of
species diversity within the community.
Standard Scientific Procedures for Implementing Ecosystem Management / 329

9. Identify Data Gaps and Priorities for Research.

Having compiled these data, managers should prepare a formal “Data Assess-
ment Statement” describing the amount and quality of the data available to
address preceding points 1 through 8. The statement should describe gaps in this
basic knowledge and evaluate how this absence of information may limit a
manager's ability to make informed land-planning decisions. Finally, the Data
Assessment should identify high priorities for research based on both the signifi-
cance of the gaps identified and on the relative costs of obtaining additional
information. This research can be undertaken at the same time managers assess
threats to diversity (Section B) and implement protective policies (Section C).

Having assembled relevant information as described, managers should determine


which immediate or potential long-term circumstances pose threats to natural
ecosystems on their lands, and they should identify which communities, species,
and other elements of native diversity have the most risk of being lost from the
planning unit and from the region. In doing so, they should use the following
analytical techniques, as well as their own judgment and expertise. The techniques
described next fall into two categories --species and population approaches and
community and landscape approaches (see Hansson, this volume). Both groups
of techniques are required for a successful management program.

1. Species and Population Approaches

Identify factors affecting viability and persistence of all indicator and


“at risk” species. Managers (and scientific personnel) should use data
collected in the inventory and identification phase (Section A) to identify
factors affecting persistence of indicator species, endangered species and
other species identified as being at risk (e.g., Ralls and Taylor, this
volume; O’Brien, this volume). These factors include known or suspected
biotic interactions, such as competition, disease, and predation, and
associations with particular communities or habitats (e.g., Thompson,
this volume).
Estimate habitat needs for all species that are threatened, endangered.
or otherwise at risk. Managers should attempt to predict minimal and
optimal habitat requirements, taking into account known or suspected
sensitivity to edge effects, area, and isolation effects. These factors
should be analyzed both on the management unit and in surrounding,
ecologically related areas.
Perform quantitative and qualitative assessments of risk to vulnerable
species. To minimize the probability of extinctions, managers should
330 / Robert S. Peters, et al.

identify which factors most influence long-term survival of endangered


and other vulnerable species on their management units and adjacent
areas. When sufficient data exist, agencies should use quantitative popu-
lation viability analysis (PVA) to estimate the risk of local extinction
for individual species. Where appropriate and feasible, such models
should be spatially explicit (e.g., Possingham, this volume) and should
be based on the best available data on habitat needs. demography, and
other aspects of sustainable population dynamics. In many cases, such
PVA models will result in estimates of how much habitat is necessary
for survival (e.g., Noon, McKelvey, and Murphy, this volume). Where
there are too few data for PVA analvsis, managers should identify threats
and assess viability with less elaborate quantitative or qualitative popula-
tion models. PVAs and or other methods should be used to assess how
“at risk” species and indicator species are likely to respond to alternative
management scenarios. These risk assessments should be routinely circu-
lated for internal and external review and reevaluated every few years
to incorporate improved data.
l Identify critical habitat for all threatened and endangered species present.
To protect habitats that sustain rare and imperiled species and to meet
the requirements of the Endangered Species Act, managers should use
the data from inventory and identification, PVA, and the other risk
analyses discussed to determine the minimum habitat necessary for long-
term persistence of each endangered or other “at risk” species on the
management unit or surrounding lands. These designations should in-
clude recommended management in and around critical habitat areas.
Managers should also determine where the critical habitat needs of
imperiled species overlap so they might be addressed simultaneously
for maximum efficiency (National Research Council, 1995).

2. Community and Landscape Approaches

9 Estimate the minimum dynamic area (MDA) for each major community
type. Each community type historically developed partly in response
to a particular disturbance regime. Thus the longleaf pine/wiregrass
community developed and was sustained by frequent fires of a certain
intensity and size. Conversely, eastern hardwood forests primarily devel-
oped where fires were relatively infrequent. Under modern conditions,
two factors related to disturbance threaten the continued persistence of
many community types. First, humans have changed many disturbance
regimes, for example, increasing or decreasing fire frequency in different
areas so that conditions no longer favor the original community. Second,
many of the remaining areas of natural habitat are reduced in size and/
or fragmented. As patches of a community type become smaller , they
Standard Scientific Procedures for Implementing Ecosystem management / 331

typically become less able to recover from unfavorable disturbance


events. For example, a remnant of eastern deciduous forest may be so
small that, after having been subjected to repeated large ties, no mature
growth remains. Whatever second growth does develop will be burned
again before it reaches maturity . Therefore, for each community type
on their land, managers must identify and maintain contiguous patches
that are large enough to ensure their long-term persistence. given the
prevailing and possible future disturbance regimes.
How does a manager determine how large a patch is large enough?
Unfortunately, we still lack a generally applicable method for determin-
ing how large an area is necessary to maintain a particular community
type, given the prevailing disturbance regime. Nonetheless, progress is
being made. In 1978 Pickett and Thompson first suggested theoretical
guidelines for calculating such an area, which they named the minimum
dynamic area. The first practical attempt to calulate MDA for a specific
community was undertaken by Givnish, Menges, and Schweitzer (1988),
who applied the MDA approach to managing fire-dominated “pine bush”
landscapes critical for the conservation of the Karner Blue Butterfly.
They concluded that areas of 2,000 acres or more were necessary to
sustain populations of the butterfly and lupine, its food plant. This appli-
cation was simplified, however, because burning was controlled and
therefore the extent of disturbance and its frequency was not random.
High priority should be given to extending this work so that we
can apply the MDA concept to communities that experience random
disturbance. In the meantime, at least one practical conclusion can be
made, namely that the size of an MDA must be large where disturbance
events are either large or common. In cases where disturbance events
are especially large or frequent, MDAs may be larger than typical man-
agement units (e.g., a USFS Ranger District), and so will require planning
beyond typical jurisdictional boundaries.
Once an adequate MDA model has been developed, the steps taken
to gather data and utilize the model should include
l choosing the community types to be modeled;
l characterizing the historical and contemporary disturbance regimes
for each community type including frequencies. areas. and intensities
of disturbance;
assessing how each community type responds to the prevailing types
of disturbance;
estimating the minimal area needed to absorb the largest disturbance
expected to occur within a 500- to 1,000-year period and still allow
recovery: via adjacent-or-nearby sources of colonizers (MDA analy-
sis); and
332 / Robert S. Peters, et al.

l identify communities at risk. Managers should identify communities


that are at risk of losing species or ecological processes. Identification
will depend on ecological research that illuminates how individual
species respond to particular threats. including fire suppression. exces-
sive timber harvesting, overgrazing, pests, pathogens, exotic species,
and extirpation of commensal or prey species (Section A).
For many community types, some assessment of risk can be developed
bv characterizing the current disturbance regimes and comparing it with
the natural historic regime. For example. when the ecological community
depends on frequent fires for health, as does longleaf pine savanna, a
decrease in fire frequency from historical levels puts some constituent
species at risk of extirpation. To the degree possible. information on
disturbance and community response should be used in an MDA-type
analysis to reveal which major communities occur in areas smaller than
their MDA.
l Perform a landscape element completeness (gap) analysis. As a comple-
ment to identifying communities at risk, managers should assess the
degree to which habitats and communities historically typical of the
region are represented in the regional landscape (Usher, 1986; National
Research Council, 1993; . Klijn and Udo de Haes, 1994). In particular.
managers should identify communities or successional stages that have
become scarce in the region or that are not currently being managed to
ensure their long-term viabilty. A thorough analysis would include
creating distribution maps of all communities, estimating minimum dy-
namic area for these communities to predict long-term persistence, exa-
minining known species-area relations, and dete rmining habitat needs
for sensitive species. Managers should also examine the extent to which
community types are protected within existing reserve lands, such as
national parks, wilderness areas, and Research Natural Areas.
The National Biological Service (NBS), in cooperation with over 30
states, has already applied gap analyses to map he location of major
vegetation types, ranges of terrestrial vertebrates. and other biotic ele-
ments and to identify those that are not adequately protected by the
existing network of public and private conservation areas or by other
conservation mechanisms (Vickerman and Smith. 1995). This approach
should be widened to incorporate information on plant community suc-
cessional stages and distributional and habitat need data for other taxo-
nomic groups (particularly rare or endemic species).
C. Management Design- Formulate Specific Management Options to Address
Recognized Threats
Managers should use the information gathered in Section B to devise effective
strategies to conserve native communities and the species and processes that
Standard Scientific Procedures for Implementing Ecosystem Management / 333

maintain them. These efforts should occur via parallel paths, assessing both the
viability of particular indicator species and the long-term sustainability of the
communities in which they occur. Although the analyses performed in Sections
A and B rest primarily on scientific expertise and judgment managers implement-
ing the procedures outlined here must consider the wider set of issues surrounding
multiple use. The procedures outlined here produce elements that can be integrated
into the management alternatives required for long-term planning and the envi-
ronmental impact process specified by the National Environmental Policy Act,
Priority for protection should be given to elements of biological diversity that
are regionally, nationally, or globally rare and/or at risk of extinction. High-
priority species, for example, would include those federally listed as threatened
or endangered, whereas high-priority ecosystems would include those identified
by the NBS (Noss et al., 1995) as “critically endanagered." Species or communities
that are nationally or globally common and secure would receive lower priority
for protection even if they happen to be rare on the planning unit. Thus, managers
should avoid management that replaces old-growth forest with second growth
even if second growth is less common than old growth on the planning unit.
Managers should be aware that the local increase in species diversity that often
occurs following habitat fragmentation usually detracts from rather than adds to
biological diversity on regional or global scales.

1. Develop Species Recovery Plans.

Federal agencies are already under obligation to devise recovery plans that
ameliorate threats to threatened and endangered species and allow populations
to recover (USFWS, 1994b). The success of these plans depends on the adequacy
of the biological data, making it critical that the best data possible be collected
and assessed. Successful recovery plans also depend on whether adequate habitat
can be provided to ensure viability of the species-for many species, such as
the Sonoran pronghom (Antilocapra americana sonoriensis) (USFWS, 1994a)
or the masked bobwhite (Colinus virgianus ridgwayi) (NWF. 1994), absence of
suitable habitat is the greatest barrier to recovery.

2. Assess the Potential to Conserve or Restore Communities at Risk

Managers should determine what opportunities exist within and beyond their
land base to conserve or restore habitat to ensure perpetuation of each community
type at risk, Such an analysis would consider landscape context dynamic ecologi-
cal processes, and the impacts of natural and human-induced disturbances, in
addition to the physical suitability of potential restoration sites. An assessment
should begin by asking
l “Is, or will this community type be threatened in the region because it
lacks some successional stages in sufficient abundance?" If this is true,
334 / Robert S. Peters, et al.

managers should assess the potential for providing more of the missing
successional stages by using active or passive techniques of community
restoration. This might be accomplished on the management unit alone
or in conjunction with near by owners.
"Is, or will, this community type be threatened in the region because it
exists on an area smaller than its required MDA?" If less than the neces-
sary MDA exists, managers should assess the potential to provide more
area for this community type by identifying lands suitable for the commu-
nity type that are presently dominated by other vegetation. If the present
dominant vegetation belongs to community types that are common on
a regional basis, managers should explore the feasibility of using restora-
tion techniques to replace this dominant vegetation with the rare commun-
nity type.
3. Develop Specific Management Practices to Sustain Biodiversity
When species or communities are at risk of loss, managers should allocate
sufficient area and make management changes to sustain those species and com-
munities. Such management would likely incorporate planning decisions on the
following two spatial scales.
l Regional scale.
Some communities and species that require extensive areas must be managed
on the regional scale. Communities typically require large protected or managed
areas if they historically developed in response to a regime of large disturbance
events. Species requiring large areas include top carnivores and some other
species with wide-ranging or otherwise dispersed populations. Large areas may
be managed by
a letting natural disturbance regimes and other natural processes reassert
themselves;
l generally letting natural regeneration of damaged communities occur
rather than using active restoration techniques;
l allowing limited commodity production in some areas, provided evidence
demonstrates that such activities will not threaten elements of diversity
and provided that close monitoring occurs; and
l cooperating with other agencies and private land owners because the
necessary large areas of habitat are likely to extend across manage-
ment boundaries.
l Local scale.
Management can be successful on small areas provided that the desired commu-
nities and species- have attributes that allowthem to persist in small areas. Such
management can include:
Scientific Procedures for Implementing Ecosystem Management / 335

l generally using more active management than for larger reserves (e.g.,
using prescribed burning to maintain small patches of prairie or pine
barrens);
l often using active restoration;
l generally excluding extensive or intensive commodity production; and
l protecting small reserves under suitable programs such as Research
Natural Areas and Wild and Scenic Rivers. Such reserves are often
created to conserve specific species or communities at risk.

Management on both local and regional scales requires planning to maximize


landscape connectivity. Specifically, isolated patches of habitat must be connected
by corridors of habitat that allow native plant and animal species to disperse
from one patch to another. This will allow migrants to exchange genes among
populations and colonists to reestablish extirpated populations. In addition, spe-
cies will be able to travel along corridors and colonize new areas, thereby shifting
their ranges to adapt to changes in climate or in the disturbance regime. Corridors
can often be placed along rivers to incorporate and protect aquatic communities.

D. Monitoring the Effects of Management on Diversity

To complete the procedures described above, managers must closely monitor the
biotic resources they oversee. Such monitoring is vital for assessing population,
community, and ecosystem trends and to evaluate how management affects
the trends. Proper monitoring can warn of impending species loss, community
degradation, and loss of ecosystem function so that midcourse corrections can
be made in management (Landres et al., 1988; Goldsmith, 1991; Crow et al.,
1994). A careful monitoring design can, in conjunction with different management
treatments, act as an experiment to determine the effects of the treatments on
biological diversity. For example, monitoring the abundance of native grasses
and forbs on both heavily and lightly grazed plots provides information on the
effects of grazing on grassland health.
Monitoring should have the following characteristics:

l Because resources are limited, managers should choose efficient and


reliable indicators of biotic change and apply the best possible analyti-
cal techniques.
l Because accurate monitoring is particularly important for communities
and species at risk, these should receive top priority.
l Monitoring should take place at several hierarchical scales to identify
and diagnose new and emerging threats to diversity (Noss, 1990).
336 / Robert S. Peters, et al.

Because much has already been written about monitoring methods in the
context of land management (e.g., Landres et al., 1988; Goldsmith, 1991; Crow
et al., 1994) and because the NBS is currently developing guidelines applicable
to all federal lands, we will not describe these techniques further.
Monitoring schemes should themselves be the subject of critical evaluation by
the scientific community. We recommend that agencies publish their monitoring
programs and distribute them for review. In addition, monitoring results should
be systematically reviewed and regularly evaluated by scientists from academia,
from local to federal levels of government, and from the private sector. It would
be efficient to integrate these reviews and evaluations into the adaptive manage-
ment cycle, with periodic updates of the activities described in Sections B, C.
and D every 5 to 10 years.
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The Ecological Basis
of Conservation
Heterogeneity, Ecosystems, and Biodiversity

.
Edited by
S.T.A. Pickert1 R.S. Ostfeldl
M. Shachak1,2 G.E. Likens1
lInstitute of Ecosystem Studies
Mary Fiagler Cary Arboretum
Millbrook, New York

2Mitrani Center for Desert Ecology


The Jacob Blaustein Institute for Desert Research
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Sede Boker, Israel

CHAPMAN && HALL

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