Title: DesignbasedModelassisted Survey Methodology for Aquatic Resources
1Design-based/Model-assisted Survey Methodology
for Aquatic Resources
- Don L. Stevens, Jr.
- Presented at
- SECOND ANNUAL CONFERENCE
- STATISTICAL SURVEY DESIGN AND ANALYSIS
- FOR AQUATIC RESOURCES
- Department of Statistics
- Oregon State University
- August 11-12, 2003
2This presentation was developed under STAR
Research Assistance Agreement No. CR82-9096-01
awarded by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency to Oregon State University. It has not
been formally reviewed by EPA. The views
expressed in this document are solely those of
the author and EPA does not endorse any products
or commercial services mentioned in this
presentation.
3Discussion Outline - 2002
- Program description
- What we are trying to do
- Program context
- Where we are how we got here
- Integration Outreach
- Who we are working with
- Accomplishments
4Discussion Outline - 2003
- Program description
- What we are trying to do
- Program context
- Where we are how we got here
- Accomplishments
- Programmatic
- Outreach
- Research
5Most Significant Programmatic Accomplishments
- We devised an acronym
- DAMARS
- Program on
- Designs And Models for Aquatic Resource Surveys
6Most Significant Programmatic Accomplishments
7DAMARSatYEAR 1.75
8Discussion Outline
- State of the Program
- Outreach(DAMARS STARMAP)
- State of the Research
- Synopsis Integration
- Preview of Presentations
9State of the Program
- Personnel
- OSU Faculty
- Steve Carroll leaving DAMARS
- Alix Gitelman
- Alan Herlihy
- Virginia Lesser on sabbatical in UK
- Paul Murtaugh leaving DAMARS
- Don Stevens
10State of the Program
- Personnel
- CSU Faculty
- Scott Urquhart
- Jay Breidt
- ISU Faculty
- Jean Opsomer
- UW Faculty
- Loveday Conquest
11State of the Program
- Personnel
- OSU Research Associates
- Breda Munoz-Hernandez
- Ruben Smith
- Jeannie Sifneos
- Dan Dalthorpe joining DAMARS this fall
12State of the Program
- Personnel
- OSU Graduate Students
- Cynthia Cooper Leigh Ann Harrod
- Kathy Georgitis Susan Hornsby
- CSU Graduate Students
- Siobhan Everson-Stewart Mark J. Delorey
- Alicia A. Johnson
- UW Graduate Students
- Rebecca Buchanan
13State of the Program
- Personnel
- OSU Graduate Students
- Cynthia Cooper Leigh Ann Harrod
- Kathy Georgitis Susan Hornsby
- CSU Graduate Students
- Siobhan Everson-Stewart Mark J. Delorey
- Alicia A. Johnson
- UW Graduate Students
- Rebecca Buchanan
14Program Objectives
- To support advances in (statistics) and
hierarchical survey design and analysis and
spatial and temporal modeling - Describe current state of aquatic ecosystems
- Detect quantify change and trend
- Predict at non-sampled locations
- Identify relationships between stressors
condition (cause/effect)
15Program Objectives
- To develop and extend the expertise on design and
analysis to States and Tribes - distance learning
- seminars
- workshops
- demonstrations
- Both DAMARS STARMAP have same objectives
- STARMAP -- learning materials
- DAMARS -- demonstration projects
16State of the Program
- Success depends on having States, Tribes, ( EPA)
use techniques tools - Foster client use of both design analysis
tools - Cooperative agreement
- Work with EPA
- Work on EPA-sponsored projects
- Use data generated by EPA projects
17State of the Program
- Research is driven by issues that arise in
aquatic monitoring - Indicator development/Monitoring Design/Analysis
(huge area) - Research topics
- Identified in RFA our experience
- Arise from collaboration with EPA, State, other
STAR researchers
18State of the Program
- Collaborative statistical research with another
statistician - Common perspective
- Complementary backgrounds
- Example Stevens Olsen
- History of joint papers presentations
- Continuingpresentation on GRTS extensions
19State of the Program
- Collaboration that brings statistical perspective
to multi-disciplinary research team - Source for new challenges that drives the
development of new methodology theory - Requires high level of commitment
- Substantial time requirement
- Example GLEI, an EaGLE STAR Program
20Collaboration with GLEIGreat Lakes Environmental
Indicators
- Stevens, Munoz, Smith spent a week visiting
GLEI in February - Identified areas where our skills could
complement GLEIs - Species-area curves wetland loss
- Sifneos, White, Anderson poster
- Probability distribution of condition indicator
- Stevens JSM presentation
- Statistical basis of ecological indicators
21State of the Program
- Demonstration Projects
- Archetypes used as models
- Real-life aquatic monitoring by real State
agencies - Push the envelope of State-level monitoring
- Design to State-articulated needs
- Make them succeed!
22Outreach- Demonstration
- Surface Waters Ambient Monitoring Program (SWAMP)
- San Francisco Estuary Regional Monitoring Program
for Trace Substances (RMP) - West Coast Tidal Wetland Monitoring and
Assessment Venture (CRAM) - Sampling Coho salmon in Oregon coastal streams
(ODFW)
23SWAMP
- Run by California State Water Resource Control
Board (Cal EPA) - Low level of activity this year
- Budget
- Management change
- Workshop Understanding Surface Water Monitoring
Requirements - SWAMP SPARC
- Scientific Planning and Review Committee
24RMP
- Designed monitoring plan for San Francisco Bay
- Pulse of the Estuary, 2000 Update
- Re-design team SFEI, USEPA Region 9, DAMARS,
USGS, others - Nice example of using prior information to guide
design - Implemented in 2001
- Rotating panel GRTS
- Intensity varies by Bay segment
- Separate designs for water column sediment
25RMP
- Plans for an analysis workshop later this
fall/winter - Draft report on re-design
- Renewed activity
- Should result in several spin-off articles
- Sarah Lowe, SFEI, will attend Wednesdays workshop
26CRAMCalifornia Rapid Assessment Method
- Funded by EPA
- Joint effort
- SFEI CCC WED
- SCCWRP DAMARS Region 9
-
27CRAMCalifornia Rapid Assessment Method
- Modeled on OhioRAM
- Extended to cover CA
- Salt marshes
- Tidal influenced
- DAMARS (Stevens) represented on the Core
Development Team - Metric/indicator development
- Planning for verification/validation study
- Pilot assessment
-
28ODFW
- Focus is on Coho Salmon
- High visibility issue in NW (OR, WA, CA, BLM,
BPA, USFS, USFWS, NOAA, USEPA) - Rotating panel GRTS is basic sampling design for
The Oregon Plan for Salmon Watersheds - ODFW scientists very willing to share their
scientific insight, their time, and their data - ODFW, OWEB, ODEQ have become our advocates
29ODFW
- Ideal test bed for design analysis
- Historical data, both probability convenience
- Dynamic frame
- Missing data, ignorable non-ignorable
- Ancillary data
- Rotating panel through time
- Rich source of analysis issues
30ODFW
- Response (population level) influenced by many
factors - Ocean conditions
- Watershed conditions
- Weather
- Bottom line Are management efforts having an
impact?
31ODFWIntegrated Monitoring Design
- There are two primary objectives of the sampling
- describe current status
- describe population trend
- Coho adult juveniles, habitat, water quality
- Relevant Information
- There is spatial pattern in the population
- Coho have a 3-year life cycle
- Natural regional stratification into Monitoring
Areas (MAs) which partition ESUs
32Sampling Design
- A rotating panel design was used to balance
between extensive population coverage (for
status) and repeat visits to same site (for
trend) - Panel definition
- One panel of sites visited every year
- Three panels of sites visited every 3 years
- Nine panels of sites visited every 9 years
- Twenty-seven panels of sites visited every 27
years - Four panels visited each year the annual panel,
a 3-year panel, a 9-year panel, and a 27-year
panel
33Sampling Design
- Sites on streams were selected using a GRTS
design - Sites were apportioned to panels so that
- Each panel is in-itself spatially well balanced
- Each annual sample is spatially well balanced
- Equi-probable sample within MA
34Research Overview
- Survey Design Methodology for Aquatic Resources
- Parametric Model Assisted Survey Methods for
Environmental Surveys - Nonparametric Model Assisted Survey Estimation
for Aquatic Resources
35Survey Design Methodology
- Presentations for this meeting
- A Cost Analysis of Ranked Set Sampling to
Estimate a Population Mean, RA Buchanan, LL
Conquest, and J-Y Courbois - Some Extensions of the Generalized Random
Tessellation Stratified (GRTS) Sampling
Methodology, DL Stevens AR Olsen - Convergence of Classes of Model-based and
Design-based Spatial Samples, C Cooper and DL
Stevens - A Hierarchical Bayesian Spatial Model for Count
Data Modeling Counts of Coho in the State of
Oregon, RA Smith, B Munoz-Hernandez and DL
Stevens Jr.
36Survey Design Methodology
- Manuscripts
- 1 in press Environmetrics
- 1 reviewed, revised, returned to JASA
- 2 in preparation
- Presentations
- 3 at JSM
- 1 at ENAR
- 3 at workshops
37Parametric Model Assisted Survey Methods
- Presentations this meeting
- Using Bayesian Spatial Models to Facilitate Water
Quality Monitoring, Steven S. Carroll and Anthony
R. Olsen - Evaluation of Adjustment Procedures for Handling
Item Nonresponse in Environmental Data, B
Munoz-Hernandez, RA Smith and V Lesser - Weighting Adjustments for Estimates of Coho
Salmon Abundance when Survey Sites Are Missing at
Random, LA Harrod, V Lesser, and B
Munoz-Hernandez - Exploring Design and Model-Based Approaches for
Handling the Non-ignorable Missing Data Mechanism
for Inference in Environmental Surveys, B
Munoz-Hernandez, RA Smith, and V Lesser
38Parametric Model Assisted Survey Methods
- Manuscripts
- 2 in preparation
- Presentations
- 2 at JSM
39Non-Parametric Model Assisted Survey Methods
- Presentations this meeting
- Nonparametric Small Area Estimation for the
Northeastern Lakes Survey, Jean D. Opsomer, F.
Jay Breidt, and Siobhan Everson-Stewart - Distribution Function Estimation in Small Areas
for Aquatic Resources, Mark J. Delorey and F. Jay
Breidt
40Non-Parametric Model Assisted Survey Methods
- Manuscripts
- 3 submitted, 1 being revised (Biometrics, Survey
Methodology, JASA) - 4 in preparation
- Presentations
- 3 at JSM
- 3 at ENAR
- Lots at other meetings