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The surface waters component of the Environmental Monitoring
and Assessment Program (EMAP): an overview
Thomas R. Whittier1
& Steven G. Paulsen2
1ManTech
Environmental Technology, Inc.;
2Environmental
Research Center University of Nevada Las Vegas; do U.S. EPA
Environmental Research Laboratory, 200 SW 35th Street, Corvallis,
OR 97333,U.S.A.
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Abstract
The U.S. EPA is developing a new monitoring program,
the Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP), to monitor
and assess the ecological health of major ecosystems, including
surface waters, forests, near-coastal waters, wetlands, agricultural
lands, arid lands, and the Great Lakes. in an integrated, systematic
manner. The program is designed to operate at regional and national
scales, for decades, and to evaluate the extent and condition of
entire ecological resources. EMAP has a common sampling framework
for all resource types. The frame consists of a systematic grid
of about 12,500 points in the conterminous United States that can
he subdivided into subgrids of varying densities. A subset of 3,200
40 km2 hexagons will be selected
for field sampling of surface water resources. A four-year resampling
cycle will allow approximately 800 lakes and 800 stream sites to
be evaluated annually. Ecological assessments for surface waters
will address three environmental values of concern: biotic integrity,
fishability, and trophic state. The focus will be on biological
assemblages, including fish, zooplankton, macroinvertebrates, birds
and diatoms, as response indicators of ecological condition,
Keywords: monitoring, surface waters, long-term, broad-scale,
U.S.A.
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