march 3, 2010 working together to restore north carolina’s natural communities

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March 3, 2010 Working together to Working together to restore North Carolina’s restore North Carolina’s natural communities natural communities

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Page 1: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

March 3, 2010

Working together to Working together to restore North Carolina’s restore North Carolina’s

natural communitiesnatural communities

Page 2: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

We shall:Explain our vision,Summarize our accomplishments,Describe feedback we have received,Present opportunities we have built,Solicit guidance on future directions.

Page 3: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities
Page 4: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Multi-institutional collaborative program.

Established in 1988 to document the composition and status of natural vegetation of the Carolinas.

Provides data, data services, soft-ware development and analysis to EEP and monitoring firms.

Page 5: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities
Page 6: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

1.* Document natural conditions with high-quality reference plots.

2.* Derive site-specific restoration targets.3.* Design site-specific restoration plan.4. Implement the plan.5.* Monitor change and trajectory toward

success.6.* Employ adaptive management as

needed.7.* Document the results.

(* = Major CVS role)

Page 7: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Detailed, justifiable, & efficient generation of restoration targets.

State-of-the-art predictions that satisfy the most stringent current and future restoration guidelines.

Page 8: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Tracking of individual trees demonstrates compliance with US-ACE requirements.

Greater plant success through selection based on past species performance and site characteristics.

Early detection of likely failure so that corrective action can be taken.

Robust and documented planning that should be resistant to future litigation by diverse interest groups.

Page 9: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Optimized data collection procedures.Consistency between years & monitoring firms.Automated analysis, QA/QC, report generation,

& evaluation of plans.Improved ease & efficacy of plant selection.Early detection of project problems or success.A methodology that is scalable

to more robust and challenging regulation.

Page 10: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities
Page 11: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Optimized for field efficiency and repeatability.

Resources include manuals, datasheets and a data entry and reporting tool.

Scalable to meet future requirements.

Complies with US-FGDC National Vegetation Classification Standard.

Page 12: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Then print datasheets…

Page 13: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Baseline data preprinted

Quickly find stems with the printed map.

Page 14: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Efficient format, pre-populated fields, flagged errors, picklists of valid options,

etc.

Page 15: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Stem Disturbance

Table 7 Report: A plot-by-plot summary of the most recent data with a summary for each year

This page shows 2 of 13 available reports

Highlights plot or year failing to

meet requirements!

LS=Live StakeP =PlantedT =Total Vegetation

Page 16: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Field and database training for practitioners.Feedback leads to improvement in sampling

protocol efficiency as well as database usability and functionality.

Page 17: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities
Page 18: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Available data include- Species frequency- Species importance- Woody stem diameters- Site data- Soil data - Maps of occurrences- Descriptions

> 6000 High-quality reference sites280 Natural community types with >= 4

plots495 Natural community types with >= 1 plot

Page 19: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities
Page 20: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

You asked -- What is gained from measurements collected using the CVS-EEP Protocol?Variables measured are mandated by EEP, not CVS.EEP initially required multiple types of measurements because it was unclear which ones would be most useful in assessing stem success. Available data from EEP MonitoringFirms will now allow CVS to assess the utility of each field measurement (e.g., ddh, height, DBH).

Page 21: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities
Page 22: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Phase 1 – Web tool for documenting reference conditions by NVC types (partially implemented).

Phase 2 – Constrain NVC types and plots by geographic region (in development).

Phase 3 – Web tool for predicting a target from site conditions (prototype complete -- future development).

Opp 1: Better, cheaper, Opp 1: Better, cheaper, more defendable more defendable restoration targetsrestoration targets

Page 23: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

http://cvs.bio.unc.edu

Page 24: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Physiognomic Group

http://cvs.bio.unc.edu/vegetation.htm

Page 25: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities
Page 26: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Data flow for identifying target community and planting list

Internal decision tree showing how site data predict community

Vegetation types classified

Critical environmental fields defined

Restoration sites chosen and environmental data

collectedRestoration sites matched

to vegetation type

Planting list generated from vegetation type

species list

Page 27: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Prototype tool predicts target vegetation type based on site data.

Planting lists could be automatically generated from community data.

Page 28: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Alternative to searching out reference areas – just look them up in minutes in your office.

Greater likelihood of selecting species that will grow well at your site.

More effective restoration – which is better for our state and better for you.

Page 29: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Better assessment & prediction of change, success, and failure over time.

Automatic generation of reports for US-ACE.

Page 30: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

How is my project doing?What is my risk of failure?How did my project work

out?What am I getting into?

Page 31: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

CVS will develop a tool that draws on multiple datasets to aid in selection and evaluation of species for planting designs. This will help: Design firms in selecting planting

materials, EEP in evaluating proposed

planting materials, Growers to better predict demand.

Page 32: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Dataset 1: Community composition, as documented in the Vegetation of the Carolinas database,

Dataset 2: Geographic distribution, as documented in the SE Floristic Atlas,

Database 3: Species environmental tolerance,as documented in the CVS reference plot database.

Page 33: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Examine the success of material (species, source, size) used in earlier EEP projects on similar sites.

Past success can be deduced from CVS-managed data from monitoring studies.

Page 34: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

How many monitoring plots are needed?Which plant attributes should continue

to be measured in the field?How often should plots be monitored?Should there be a

mixed monitoring strategy for tracking stems and observing site-wide variation?

Page 35: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Larger ddh and taller height both resulted in higher survival of stems.

Page 36: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

We built a model to predict survival based on ddh and height. The model did little better than a model based on height or ddh alone.

DBH does not predict stem survival until stems reach 5 cm.

Page 37: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Current Requirements

Height or Type DDH(mm units)

Height(cm units)

DBH(cm units)

< 137 cm tall mm precision cm precision no

≥ 137 cm and < 250 cm tall mm precision cm precision cm precision

≥ 250 cm and < 400 cm tall no 10 cm precision cm precision

≥ 400 cm tall no 50 cm precision cm precision

Live stake no cm precision if ≥ 137 cm tall, cm precision

Possible Revised Requirements

Height or Type Height(cm units)

DBH(cm units)

< 137 cm tall cm precision no

≥ 137 cm and < 250 cm tall cm precision cm precision

≥ 250 cm maybe?? cm precision

Page 38: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Data being processed by CVS could be used in various ways to make restoration and monitoring more efficient and effective.

We could facilitate and enhance this process with regular meetings of CVS with EEP, US-ACE and ACEC firms.

CVS could reserve a portion of analysis time for responding to issues raised at those meetings.

Page 39: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

Potential return on investment: Cost savings > $200K/yr … if continued.

CVS is now prepared to develop state-of-the-art tools that address key components of the CVS-EEP vision.

Tools currently available and those under development would take advantage of the results of our past CVS-EEP collaboration and allow EEP and its monitoring firms to do a significantly better job more quickly with less risk and at substantially less cost.

.

Page 40: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities

If EEP does not pursue these opportunities at this time, key CVS staff will not be retained and the described opportunities will likely vanish.

Loss of the CVS-EEP partnership would result in loss of data management & report generation. Moreover, it would significantly increase costs for both EEP and ACEC firms.

Continuation of the CVS-EEP collaboration would ensure ongoing maintenance of the EEP-CVS databases for monitoring and reference data and tools for their effective use.

Page 41: March 3, 2010 Working together to restore North Carolina’s natural communities