
Ecology-PSAMP Current Spatial/Temporal Monitoring 2002-Present
Environmental Management ApplicationThe current PSAMP Sediment Component Spatial Monitoring element provides environmental managers with a recent characterization of sediment condition (i.e., the spatial extent of sediment quality degradation) in eight Puget Sound regions sampled on an annual, rotational cycle. Temporal changes can also be assessed by comparison of new regional data with baseline data to determine whether sediment quality in each Puget Sound region is improving, degrading, or remaining the same over time. BackgroundSediment Monitoring Program Revised After completion of the 1997-1999 PSAMP/NOAA partnership work, Ecology's Marine Sediment Monitoring Team revised the spatial sediment monitoring program to include a more refined probabilistic sampling design (below) and to incorporate a temporal element for quantification of large-scale regional changes in sediment quality over time. A refined list of sampling parameters was generated, and the original study area was expanded to include the bays and inlets of the San Juan Archipelago, Admiralty Inlet, and the eastern Strait of Juan de Fuca. A nested set of sampling frames, including the whole Sound, eight Puget Sound sediment monitoring regions, and five strata were defined. Each region will be sampled, beginning in 2006, on an annual rotational cycle, alternating 9 years of regional sampling with 1 year of focused embayment sampling or specialized projects. (Sampling schedule.) Results will include spatial characterization and quantification of sediment quality for a different region each year, along with temporal comparison of this recently collected data to the older baseline data. Sediment quality characteristics measured will include the Sediment Quality Triad of toxicity, chemistry, and infaunal community structure. Sediment Quality Baseline Conditions Established for Puget Sound In 2002 and 2003, prior to commencement of this 10-year rotational sampling cycle, sediments from the newly added study areas (San Juan Archipelago, Admiralty Inlet, and eastern Strait of Juan de Fuca) were sampled and analyzed for the Sediment Quality Triad of parameters. The 1997-2003 sediment data were then used to quantify sediment quality baseline conditions for each of the 8 sediment monitoring regions and for the whole Puget Sound study area.Goals and ObjectivesThe overall goals of the sediment monitoring component of the PSAMP are to:
Sampling DesignRegional and Embayment Rotational Sampling With guidance from the PSAMP Steering Committee, the Puget Sound sediment study area has been divided into eight sediment monitoring regions defined by oceanographic and geological features of Puget Sound, as well as the distribution of biota (fish, birds, and marine mammals) throughout the Sound. In addition, five sediment monitoring strata, defined by major geographic features and degree of anthropogenic (human-caused) activity (strata definitions), have also been delineated within each region. Thirty to forty sediment samples will be collected annually, alternating 9 years of regional sampling with one year of focus embayment sampling or specialized projects. Data will be summarized annually to spatially characterize the sediments in each monitoring region, the strata within each region, and ultimately, Puget Sound as a whole. Newly collected regional data will be compared with historical data to determine changes between sampling periods.With assistance from EPA’s Aquatic Resources Monitoring Design and Analysis Team in Corvallis, Oregon, the probabilistic random, stratified sampling design was refined using a spatially-balanced, generalized random tessellation stratified (GRTS) multi-density survey design, as described by Stevens (1997), and Stevens and Olsen (1999, 2002). The GRTS design incorporates a hierarchical randomization process to ensure the sample is spatially-balanced across the PSAMP study region. It also allows sites to be selected with unequal probability to satisfy the sample size requirements by basin and category. Quality Assurance Project Plan (QAPP)Dutch, M., Edward Long, Sandra Aasen, Kathy Welch, and Valerie Partridge. In preparation. Puget Sound Ambient Monitoring Program: Marine Sediment Monitoring Component - Revised Quality Assurance Project and Implementation Plan. Spatial/Temporal Component. Washington State Department of Ecology, Olympia, WA. FindingsPuget Sound baseline data collected from 1997-1999 and 2002-2003 by the PSAMP/NOAA Partnership were used to calculate the spatial extent of degraded sediment quality in Puget Sound using the Sediment Quality Triad Index. Findings of this survey concluded that:
Publications
DataRaw data can be obtained by downloading the compressed Microsoft Access database (PSAMP Sediment Monitoring database),or by contacting Sandra Aasen sgei461@ecy.wa.gov.
Literature CitedStevens, D.L., Jr. (1997) Variable density grid-based sampling designs for continuous spatial populations. Environmetrics, 8, 167-95.Stevens, D.L., Jr. and Olsen, A.R. (1999) Spatially restricted surveys over time for aquatic resources. Journal of Agricultural, Biological, and Environmental Statistics, 4, 415-28. Stevens, D.L., Jr. and Olsen, A.R. (2002) Variance estimation for spatially balanced samples of environmental resources. Environmetrics (submitted). |
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