Abstract

The National Wetland Condition Assessment (NWCA) is one of a series of probability-based National Aquatic Resource Surveys (NARS) conducted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) to provide a comprehensive assessment of the condition of the Nation’s waters. Randomized design and standardized training and protocols allow USEPA to analyze data that are nationally consistent and regionally relevant. Each NARS assessment was preceded by careful consideration of key logistical elements that included pre-survey planning, training, sampling logistics, and laboratory analysis. Numerous state, tribal, and contractor crews were supported across the country for each assessment; sampling and sample analyses were tracked from initiation; laboratory analyses were completed at USEPA, state, regional, and contract laboratories; and the data analyses and reporting were completed by USEPA-led workgroups, states, and contractors. The complexity and difficulty of each step offered unique challenges and provided lessons learned for each of the NARS assessments. Major logistical elements for implementing large scale assessments that are constrained by sampling period and number and duration of visits are covered in this paper. These elements include sample transport, equipment and supplies, sampling and sample tracking, information management regional technical expertise, and a sound field training program. This paper describes how lessons from previous assessments were applied to the NWCA and how new challenges faced in the NWCA were addressed and carried forward into future surveys.

Highlights

  • This article is part of the Topical Collection on Monitoring Wetlands on a Continental Scale: The Technical Basis for the National Wetland Condition Assessment

  • The National Wetland Condition Assessment (NWCA) rotates on a 5-year schedule with the other National Aquatic Resource Surveys (NARS) assessments: the National Lakes Assessment (NLA), National Rivers

  • The 2004 Wadeable Streams Assessment (WSA) was a nationalscale precursor to the NARS program that developed many of the methods and approaches used in the NARS assessments (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The 2011 National Wetland Condition Assessment (NWCA) was the first-ever nationwide probabilistic survey of U.S wetlands. The NWCA is one of four national assessments under the U.S Environmental Protection Agency’s (USEPA) National Aquatic Resource Surveys (NARS), which are designed to generate statistically valid estimates of the ecological health of national water resources through sampling for representative biotic community, water chemistry, and associated ecological data. 329 Page 2 of 14 and Streams Assessment (NRSA), and the National Coastal Condition Assessment (NCCA) (Table 1). The need for nationwide surveys that could generate data on aquatic resource conditions at national and regional scales was identified by several entities, beginning with Paulsen et al (1998), Shapiro et al (2008), GAO (2000), NRC (2000), and the H. Program support contractors for the WSA and NARS assessments were tasked with coordinating and supporting multiple states, agencies, tribes, and contractors for the design and execution of survey training and logistics. As with all of the assessments, the complexities and Bon the ground^ realities of the NWCA execution presented logistical challenges that required implementation of adaptations from previous surveys and adaptive management during the field season to solve problems not anticipated in planning phases

Logistics in national assessments
The importance of adaptive management
National assessment
National Coastal Condition
Contractor Field Logistics Coordinator and base support
Field demonstration studies
Adaptive training
Site evaluation and replacement
Findings
Adaptive management for future national assessment logistics

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