Title: Making the Most of Biological Water Quality Monitoring:
1Making the Most of Biological Water Quality
Monitoring
- Ecological and Toxicological Water Quality Data
Elements - ACWI Meeting
- Herndon, VA
- September 15, 2004
2- Understanding the interactions between humans
the environment requires data of known quality
collected at different spatial temporal scales
from many scientific disciplines. - Because no single group can collect all the data
needed to understand and deal with the
complexities of natural systems, we must learn to
share data effectively.
Good data documentation for effective data
sharing
3Benefits of Data Sharing
- Increased spatial, temporal, or taxonomic scale
of an assessment - Increased pool of reference sites available to
any one program - Enhanced ability to make scientifically
defensible judgements on water quality - Provides decision makers with better information
with which to devise and implement monitoring
strategies - Increased ability to use data produced by other
programs encourages collaborative efforts - Reduced costs
4Barriers to Data Sharing
- DATA COMPARABILITY
- DATA EXCHANGE
- DATA MGT
- DATA ACCESS
- DATA INTERPRETATION
- DATA DOCUMENTATION
- it all comes back to metadata
5A Few Good Quotes
- FGDC (2000) "Data producers and users cannot
afford to be without documented data. - NAS (2002)Far too many environmental research
projects give insufficient attention, in either
the planning or the implementation stage, to the
long-term archiving of their data sets. - GAO (2002) EPA should provide clear guidance
to states on the information they should use to
describe their methods for identifying impaired
waters - GAO (2004) recommend development of clear
guidance on metadata standards so that data users
can integrate data from various sources
6What are Water Quality Data Elements
- Information about data that answer basic
questions to facilitate data exchange - Who? (Which organizations are responsible?)
- What? (What was monitored and found?)
- Why? (Why was the monitoring conducted?)
- When? (When was the monitoring done?)
- Where? (Where was the monitoring done?)
- How? (How was the sampling/testing done?)
7Data Element Modules 1 - Contacts 2 - Analyte /
Endpoint Result 3 - Reason for Sampling 4 -
Date/Time of Sampling 5 - Location 6 - Sample
Collection Methods 7 - Sample Analysis Methods
QA/QC
8Status of Data Elements
- Chemical and microbiological elements approved by
ACWI on May 15, 2001 and being implemented /
considered by several agencies - Population/community elements approved by the
Methods Board (2003) and Council (2004) - Toxicity elements approved by the Methods Board
(2003) and Council (2004) - Habitat elements drafted in progress
- Plan to address biomarkers and sediment data
elements soon
9Biology Data Elements Workgroup Charge
To prepare a set of data elements to be used to
structure the sharing and archiving of biological
data. The list of data and metadata elements
is intended to promote data sharing but without
being an exhaustive list of every possible data
element that could be reported.
10Overlap in Elements (Depending on Type of Data
Reported)
- Toxicity sample collection - chem/micro sampling
elements - Plankton/algal surveys chem/micro sample
processing elements - Organism tissue chemical analysis - Chemical
analysis elements - Organism tissue sampling population / community
sample prep elements
11Biological Data Elements Modules Under
Consideration
- Biological ecological and toxicological
- Biological assessment (bioassessment) evaluates
conditions of waterbody using biosurveys other
direct measurements of resident biota - Toxicology (ecotoxicology) studies the harmful
effects of chemicals on biota in the context of
the natural environment - biomonitoring evaluation of effects using
ecological indicators, populations, etc. - bioassays evaluation of real toxicity under
controlled conditions in the lab
12Points to Ponder
- A WQDE guidance document is currently under
review - Minimum elements needed to facilitate data
exchange evaluate methods data comparability - Categories of information relevant to various
aspects of wq monitoring practices - Most organizations already collect this info
its just a matter of documenting it - New technologies make implementation less onerous
13Proposed Timeline for Approval
- 10/1/04 Guidance document on WQDEs to NWQMC
- 10/22/04 Guidance document on WQDEs to ACWI
- 11/19/04 ACWI comments on bio data elements and
guidance document - distribute lists within organizations solicit
feedback - 12/17/04 Final Action
- ACWI conference call to discuss data elements and
guidance document - vote via email
- letter of support/formal adoption
14"If you think the cost of metadata production is
too high - you haven't compiled the costs of NOT
creating metadata loss of information with staff
changes, data redundancy, data conflicts,
liability, misapplications, and decisions based
upon poorly documented data." FGDC (2000)