1 / 3

IEA – the Science behind EBM Why are IEAs Needed?

IEA – the Science behind EBM Why are IEAs Needed?. A new era of ocean stewardship: Ecosystem-based management (EBM) Need for more holistic, integrated, multi-sectoral approach to management of ocean resources is now widely accepted [in the scientific community]

dot
Télécharger la présentation

IEA – the Science behind EBM Why are IEAs Needed?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IEA – the Science behind EBMWhy are IEAs Needed? • A new era of ocean stewardship: Ecosystem-based management (EBM) • Need for more holistic, integrated, multi-sectoral approach to management of ocean resources is now widely accepted [in the scientific community] • Recognizes the important needs for ecosystem sustainability and services as well as tradeoffs that emerge in trying to meet those needs; • Aims to sustainably improve and balance ecological and human well-being • Despite appreciation for integrated EBM, there remain few examples of successful implementation; This is in part because we need scientific tools to make the scientific principles of EBM tractable to resource managers • NOAA’s IEAs will fill this need by providing scientific analyses and tools tractable to resource managers attempting to implement EBM • Integrated Ecosystem Assessments are to EBM what the stock assessment process is to fishery management, but consist of a broad range of products to support the range of management bodies/decisions served by IEAs • To meet the goal(s) of EBM, NOAA’s IEAs are cross-sectoral assessments distinguishing IEAs from single-sector ecosystem activities (e.g. EBFM) • IEAs synthesize existing data and simultaneously analyze multiple pressures impacts upon an ecosystem and its services to investigate trade-offs and allocations to inform management

  2. What are the products of an IEA? • Conceptual models that synthesize our knowledge about how the ecosystem functions, produces ecosystem services, and responds to anthropogenic changes • Assessments of status and trends in ecosystem pressures, states, and services • Risk Analysis for key ecosystem indicators and services • Forecast of the future condition of the ecosystem and its services under a range of likely policies and management strategies to evaluate the relative success of management actions in achieving the desired target conditions • ULTIMATE PRODUCT: Comprehensive/holistic information provided to managers to support and inform management decisions in a dynamic, multi-sectoral ecosystem context

  3. What does an operational IEA look like? • IEAs are a living, evolving, adaptable process • They are a long-term continuum that regularly provides a series of completed products or “modules” along that continuum to operationally support specific management objectives and decision processes • A module can be a final outcome of a specific management objective that has run through the process and resulted in a completed, packaged management module • Though IEAs share a common national framework, the implementation will inherently vary regionally, and even sub-regionally, based on the ecosystem of interest and the management objective(s): • Because IEAs are supporting management by a diversity of entities across many regions and it is known that scientific tools must be tailored to be useful to management, IEAs will not have a single operational “look” • Regions will have more “uniqueness” at the beginning as approaches are tested and lessons learned; over time there may be convergence as best practices are shared across regions • The consistency is that all operational IEAs will be effectively supporting EBM decisions within their region on a regular basis • Ultimate outcome is informed EBM decisions supported by holistic, integrated scientific analyses/evaluation that is itself informed by clearly defined ecosystem objectives and targets • Overarching goal is to inform EBM decisions that will promote an ecosystem that is both sustainable and capable of providing the diverse ecosystem services upon which our society depends

More Related