Evaluating the Sampling Design of a Long-Term Community-Based Estuary Monitoring Program

Community-based monitoring programs (CBMPs) are a cost-effective option to collect the long-term data required to effectively monitor estuaries. Data quality concerns have caused some CBMP datasets, which could fill knowledge gaps for aquatic ecosystems, to go unused. The Community Aquatic Monitorin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Fishes 2021-09, Vol.6 (3), p.27
Hauptverfasser: Kidd, Jess A., Boudreau, Monica, Bailey, Robert C., van den Heuvel, Michael R., Servos, Mark R., Courtenay, Simon C.
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container_end_page
container_issue 3
container_start_page 27
container_title Fishes
container_volume 6
creator Kidd, Jess A.
Boudreau, Monica
Bailey, Robert C.
van den Heuvel, Michael R.
Servos, Mark R.
Courtenay, Simon C.
description Community-based monitoring programs (CBMPs) are a cost-effective option to collect the long-term data required to effectively monitor estuaries. Data quality concerns have caused some CBMP datasets, which could fill knowledge gaps for aquatic ecosystems, to go unused. The Community Aquatic Monitoring Program (CAMP) is a CBMP that has collected littoral nekton assemblage data from estuaries in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence since 2003. Concerns with the CAMP sampling design (station placement and numbers) have prevented decision-makers from using the data to inform estuary health assessments. This study tested if CAMP’s sampling design that accommodates volunteer participation provides similar information as a scientific sampling approach. Six CAMP stations and six stations selected using a stratified random design were sampled at ten estuaries. A permutational-MANOVA revealed nekton assemblages were generally not significantly different between the two sampling designs. The current six CAMP stations are sufficient to detect the larger differences in species abundances that may indicate differences in estuary condition. The predicted increase in precision (2%) with twelve stations is not substantive enough to warrant an increased sampling effort. CAMP’s scientific utility is not limited by station selection bias or numbers. Furthermore, well-designed CBMPs can produce comparable data to scientific studies.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/fishes6030027
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subjects Aquatic ecosystems
Community
community-based monitoring
Data
Decision making
Environmental monitoring
Estuaries
Estuarine dynamics
estuary monitoring
Fish
Flounder
Nekton
nekton assemblage
Salinity
Sampling
sampling design
Volunteers
Water quality
title Evaluating the Sampling Design of a Long-Term Community-Based Estuary Monitoring Program
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