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1 March 2006 MONITORING BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY: STRATEGIES, TOOLS, LIMITATIONS, AND CHALLENGES
Erik A. Beever
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Monitoring is an assessment of the spatial and temporal variability in one or more ecosystem properties, and is an essential component of adaptive management. Monitoring can help determine whether mandated environmental standards are being met and can provide an early-warning system of ecological change. Development of a strategy for monitoring biological diversity will likely be most successful when based upon clearly articulated goals and objectives and may be enhanced by including several key steps in the process. Ideally, monitoring of biological diversity will measure not only composition, but also structure and function at the spatial and temporal scales of interest. Although biodiversity monitoring has several key limitations as well as numerous theoretical and practical challenges, many tools and strategies are available to address or overcome such challenges; I summarize several of these. Due to the diversity of spatio-temporal scales and comprehensiveness encompassed by existing definitions of biological diversity, an effective monitoring design will reflect the desired sampling domain of interest and its key stressors, available funding, legal requirements, and organizational goals.

Erik A. Beever "MONITORING BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY: STRATEGIES, TOOLS, LIMITATIONS, AND CHALLENGES," Northwestern Naturalist 87(1), 66-79, (1 March 2006). https://doi.org/10.1898/1051-1733(2006)87[66:MBDSTL]2.0.CO;2
Published: 1 March 2006
KEYWORDS
analytical tools
definitions of biological diversity
indicators
methodological considerations
Pacific Northwest
sampling designs
structure-composition-function framework
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