What are these data trying to tell us?

Bill Nuttle ·
15 May 2017
Environmental Report Cards | 

“Let the data speak for themselves,” is a quote frequently attributed to Sir R. A. Fisher. Fisher was biologist who was drawn to the task of sifting through 70 years of data on crop yields and genetics accumulated at Rothamsted Experimental Station. The challenge of making sense of all this data led Fisher to develop a number of statistical tools that are used today by everyone who works with data. His statistical methods allow data to speak to us by answering simple and direct questions.

R.A. Fisher developed the statistical tools of data analysis that scientists use to get answers to simple, direct questions. Environment report cards are a tool for assembling this information to answer more complex questions. Image Credit: flickr
R.A. Fisher developed the statistical tools of data analysis that scientists use to get answers to simple, direct questions. Environment report cards are a tool for assembling this information to answer more complex questions. Image Credit: flickr

Using data to answer big questions can be a daunting task. Fisher spent his entire career working in the cloister of academia to answer the question of how evolution by natural selection works through genetics. However, the work of many people is required when the answer to a big question, such as “Is this ecosystem healthy?” is needed quickly. This is a question asked regularly when one uses the process of adaptive management to restore and preserve the environment. Coordinating the work of large teams of scientists is an essential part of ecosystem restoration. Basic analyses of many different parts of the ecosystem have to come together to answer the overall question, “How’s the ecosystem doing?

In March 2017, an IAN team traveled to West Palm Beach, Florida, to begin working on the 2019 System Status Report for CERP, the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan. The system status report is produced every five years by the RECOVER (REstoration COordination & VERification) team. RECOVER is a multi-agency organization charged with monitoring the ecology in the mosaic of ecosystems that make up the Florida Everglades. Appropriately, the workshop was held at the field station that houses the environmental monitoring operations of the South Florida Water Management District. Visitors are greeted by a display that documents the history of hydrologic monitoring from the 1940s until the present day.

Everglades restoration encompasses four regional ecosystems.
Everglades restoration encompasses four regional ecosystems.

Even before the restoration project began the Everglades was possibly the most extensively monitored watershed in the world. Beginning in 1949, the US Army Corps of Engineers began building a complex system of dikes and canals for flood control and to supply water for agriculture and for the rapidly growing urban areas on the east coast, Miami, and the west coast, Naples and Fort Myers. The system is controlled from a space-age control room at the South Florida Water Management District headquarters, with real-time data being fed in from a vast array of sensors that measure water levels, canal flows, water quality parameters, and weather. In addition to these hydrologic data, RECOVER collects data on soils and sediment, the shifting mosaic of wetland and submerged aquatic vegetation communities, and the health and behavior of wading birds, oysters, alligators and crocodiles.

History of Everglades monitoring on display at the South Florida Water Management District. Source: WK Nuttle
History of Everglades monitoring on display at the South Florida Water Management District. Source: WK Nuttle

The March workshop kicked off the work of RECOVER’s scientists, who are now beginning the task of analyzing this vast trove of data. The IAN team is helping RECOVER to incorporate elements of an environmental report card into the 2019 System Status Report. Building on the success of the Chesapeake Bay Report Card, it is anticipated that an Everglades report card will help communicate the results of these analyses to the report’s diverse audience. But, there is an additional benefit. Leaders of RECOVER are also using the process of building an Everglades report card to coordinate the work of their large team as each member grapples with the question, “What are these data trying to tell me?

Attendees of the RECOVER workshop (From left: Caroline Donovan, Dave Rudnick, Bill Nuttle, April Patterson, Mike Simmons, Jed Redwine, Jenna May, Fred Sklar, Phyllis Klarmann, Tom Dreschel, Patti Gorman, Gretchen Ehlinger, Miles Meyer, Emily Nastase, Patrick Pitts, Agnes McLean, Alexandra Fries, and Andy Rodusky. Not pictured: Therese East)
Attendees of the RECOVER workshop (From left: Caroline Donovan, Dave Rudnick, Bill Nuttle, April Patterson, Mike Simmons, Jed Redwine, Jenna May, Fred Sklar, Phyllis Klarmann, Tom Dreschel, Patti Gorman, Gretchen Ehlinger, Miles Meyer, Emily Nastase, Patrick Pitts, Agnes McLean, Alexandra Fries, and Andy Rodusky. Not pictured: Therese East)