The Nation’s living resources and the habitats on which they depend are undergoing constant change. To protect and conserve the living resources entrusted to their care, land and resource managers must first understand the condition, or status, of those resources (what and how many there are, where they are, how well they are doing), and their trends (how they are changing over time and space).
The USGS Status and Trends of Biological Resources Program responds to these information needs by providing the Department of the Interior, other government agencies, and the public with science-based monitoring data and information for local, regional, and national assessment of our biological resources and their supporting ecosystems.
The mission of the USGS Status and Trends of Biological Resources Program is to measure, predict, assess, and report the status and trends of the Nation's biological resources to facilitate research, enable resource management and stewardship, and promote public understanding and appreciation of our living resources.
The Program Strategic Plan will enhance successful fulfillment of our mission by better meeting the biological inventory and monitoring information needs of the land and resource management community. By setting clear goals, strategies, and measures of success, this Plan will guide development of a more cohesive, unified program over the next five years. The Plan outlines strategies for increasing communication, cooperation, and collaboration among the USGS, its partners, and other stakeholders involved in biological resource monitoring. It envisions a process whereby scientifically valid biological status and trends information is readily available to land and resource managers and the public to inform and enable sound stewardship of the Nation’s biological resources.
In partnership with collaborators, a document will be developed describing Framework elements, the organizational relationships among them, and their contribution to the accomplishment of existing and emerging biological resource monitoring goals. The Framework will foster improved programmatic efficiencies and economies of scale through better collaboration among public and private organizations. To this end, our initial objectives are to
We will work with partner agencies and organizations to inventory and understand the nature of ongoing biological monitoring programs. Further, we will facilitate dialogue among partners to (1) share and increase the collective knowledge concerning the status and trends of biological resources, and (2) work together to develop and advance a Framework to manage this knowledge.
Successful monitoring the status and trends of biological resources will require that methodologies are current, appropriate to their intended purpose, well documented, scientifically sound, and, to the extent possible, compatible among studies. To achieve this, the Program will network and cooperate with DOI and other public and private organizations conducting research programs involving development of biological inventory and monitoring tools and techniques.
Priority objectives for meeting this goal include
The existing USGS monitoring activities are at the heart of status and trends, and the USGS is committed to continuing the data collection activities that are core to its mission. To meet remaining and future needs, we will network with other agencies and organizations engaged in biological inventory and monitoring to become aware of what is already available, identify gaps where further investments are warranted, and develop and implement appropriate new projects. Accordingly, our objectives include
Much of the work to achieve these objectives will be conducted in partnership with other public and private agencies and organizations. Working through programs and partnerships like the National Biological Information Infrastructure (NBII), we will improve biological monitoring as well as data access and management in order to deliver higher-quality information that natural resource managers, the research community, and the public can easily retrieve and apply.
Finally, the Program will assess information collected and produce reports that are relevant to resource management and biological research needs. Products and services will focus on answering questions posed by DOI resource managers and the broader resource management and scientific community. The Program will use information made available from compatible programs in other agencies, and will collaborate with these partners, where appropriate, in producing more comprehensive, integrated, and applicable analyses and reports. Our objectives are to
Timeliness and ease of access are high priorities for making this information available. Emphasis will be placed on serving data from multiple sources on the Web to reflect information and knowledge on the status and trends of the Nation's biological resources at local, regional, and national scales.