O/E: a standardized way to make site

Download Report

Transcript O/E: a standardized way to make site

O/E:

a standardized way to make site-specific assessments of biological condition

Chuck Hawkins Western Center for Monitoring and Assessment of Freshwater Ecosystems Utah State University

What is O/E? O/E is a measure of the taxonomic completeness of the biological community observed at a site

O/E 0.38

E = 8 taxa O = 3 taxa

Why

Site-Specific

Assessments are Important: The world is variable and assessments should lead to biologically meaningful, legally defensible, and fair assessments that minimize both false positives and false negatives.

Why

Standardized

Assessments are Important: They allow uniform criteria and standards to be developed that apply to all waterbodies (uniform ≠ fixed)

How can we achieve both site-specific and standardized assessments?

• Recognize that natural ecosystems vary considerably in their expected biota.

• Develop ways of describing the expected biota for individual sites (site-specific).

• Assess the degree to which observed biota equal that expected for the site.

• Develop criteria and standards based on the relative degree of departure from the expected biota (standardized).

The Technical Challenge:

Accurately and precisely describing the biota expected in different waterbodies in a State.

The O/E Approach

1. Select a set of high-quality reference sites that fully characterize the natural biological variation and potential that occurs within a state.

2. Develop predictive models that relate variation in biota to easily measured predictor variables.

3. Quantify model error.

4. Compare the biota observed at a site to that predicted (expected) to occur for that site ‘type’.

5. Develop biological criteria and standards that incorporate measures of error and are consistent with the designated uses of different waterbodies.

Reference Site Selection Criteria • Minimal chemical contaminants • Minimal flow alteration • Natural riparian vegetation • Natural mixture of habitat types

Reference Criteria

• Used comparable reference criteria • Based on: – EMAP reference criteria – Neighboring state reference criteria – Colorado water quality standards

Taxonomic Data

• Resolved ambiguous taxonomic information within and among sites • Both approaches used comparable taxonomic resolution

Modeling and Assessments

1. Classify reference sites into groups based on their biological composition.

2. Estimate the frequencies of occurrence (

fo

) of different taxa in each reference site group.

3. Develop a statistical model that predicts the probabilities that an assessed site belongs to each group (

pg

) .

4. Weight

fo

by

pg

to refine estimates of the probabilities of capturing (

pc

) every taxon in the state at an assessed site.

5. Compute O/E from estimates of

pc

derived from sample data (O) and predictions (E).

6. Assess site condition in the context of model error.

How O/E is Calculated: Sum of taxa pc’s estimates the number of taxa (E) that should be observed at the site given standard sampling.

Taxa 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 E pc 0.92

0.86

0.70

0.63

0.51

0.32

0.07

0.00

4.01

O * * * 3 O/E = 3 / 4.01 = 0.75

O 2 * * * 3 O 3 3 * * *

Describing Model Error

O E 1 O/E

Assessing Biotic Condition

Criterion defining high biological integrity Reference Sites 0 Decreasing biological integrity

O/E

1

Initial Results for Colorado

• No time to go into technical details of modeling.

• Will focus on: – The biological classification of reference sites.

– The predictors of biotic variability.

– Error of the model.

Foothills?

Plains Low elevation sites High elevation sites

Spatial Distribution of Different Classes of Reference Sites GROUP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

-102 -103 -104 -105 -106 -107 -108 -109 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 GROUP 150 100 50 0 -50 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 GROUP 2 1 0 5 4 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 GROUP What group does a site with log WSA = 2.9 belong to? Temperature, stream size, and geography were the best predictors of what class a site belonged to.

There was no evidence that the model was biased by biotic class or ecoregion.

GROUP 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0

O/E 4 3 2 1 7 6 5 10 9 8 ER CP SR WHP SWTL O/E 1.04

1.00

0.96

0.97

SD of 0.17 is ~ 2/3 of possible precision.

Summary

• The CO model is similar in performance to models developed for OR, WA, CA, and WY.

• Initial results suggest that site-specific assessments can be made with acceptable error and expressed in standardized units that allow direct comparisons across stream types.

• Assessments are easy to generate and have an intuitive biological meaning interpretable by all stakeholders.