Ecological assessment
Ecological assessment implies the monitoring of ecological resources, to discover the current and changing conditions. EAs are required components of most hazardous waste site investigations. Such assessments, in conjunction with contamination and human health risk assessments, help to evaluate the environmental hazards posed by contaminated sites and to determine remediation requirements.
In ecological assessment many abiotic and biotic indicators, reflecting the pluralistic components of ecosystems, are used. Reporting on the state of the environment requires that information on separate indicators are integrated into comprehensive yardsticks or indices. EA is extremely complex because of regional and temporal variation in vulnerability of ecosystems and because of limited understanding of ecosystem functioning and health.
Indicators
Ecological indicators are able to- assess the condition of the environment
- provide an early warning signal of changes in the environment, or
- diagnose the cause of an environmental problem.
In general EA indicators can be divided into abiotic and biotic indicators. Due to the complexity of ecosystems and environmental processes, a set of indicators reflecting the many facets of ecosystems is needed. Chemical, physical, and biological indicators each have specific advantages and disadvantages for monitoring and assessment.
Abiotic indicators, which may give information on the risks or threats from stressors to ecosystems are comparatively well correlated with sources of pollutants and disturbances but may not reflect ecological end points in themselves.
Biotic indicators may reflect end points and may be used to differentiate "healthy" from "sick" ecosystems. Correlation of biotic indicators with sources of pollutants and other disturbances is relatively difficult due to the complexity of environmental processes and the multitude of potential stressors.
Critical appraisal:
- small number of indicators lead to fail considering the full complexity of the ecological system
- choice of ecological indicators depends on management programs that have vague long-term goals and objectives
- monitoring programs miss predominantly the scientific demand
Types of ecological assessment
- availability
- accuracy
- reliability and
- resolution
The U.S. Nature Conservancy has developed Rapid Ecological Assessment , an integrated methodology to provide the multiple scale, up-to-date information required to guide conservation actions. REA relies on analysis of aerial photography, videography, and satellite image data to identify conservation sites and to direct field sampling and research for cost-effective biological and ecological data acquisitions.
Goals
The goal of EA is to understand the structure and function of ecosystems in order to develop improved management options. Furthermore, developing models to predict the response of ecosystems to changes contributes to finding a particular management strategy.The results of the EA will be used to suggest possible improvements of the pollutant´s properties to reduce the potential environmental impacts.
Typical applications
- Education
- Agriculture
- Geography
- Engineering
- Marine research.
Ecological assessment in the U.S.