San Diego Multiple Species Conservation Program (MSCP) Rare Plant Monitoring Review and Revision

Type: report

Article abstract: The objectives of this document are to review the current status of the component of the monitoring program that focuses on rare plants, and to make recommendations for an efficient program design that propels conservation forward in the region. For conservation to be effective, ecological monitoring must be efficient and sustainable, responsive to agency management needs, regionally integrated, and flexible enough to respond to emerging issues as they arise. The monitoring must be focused on the assessment of how populations of MSCP taxa respond to management regimes and particular management actions. Thus, this review takes a look at program vision and structure, implementation plans, available data, and institutional support of the current monitoring efforts. We provide recommendations for a revised rare plant monitoring framework based on current concepts in conservation biology (especially adaptive management), data analyses, and agency and stakeholder feedback. We use the framework to develop an example Monitoring and Management Plan protocol for San Diego ambrosia (Ambrosia pumila).

Number of pages: 98

Authors: McEachern, Kathryn; Pavlik, Bruce; Rebman, Jon; Sutter, Robert;

Year: 2006

Purpose: Review the current status of the component of the monitoring program that focuses on rare plants, and to make recommendations for an efficient program design that propels conservation forward in the region.

Prepared for: City of San Diego;

Prepared by: U.S. Geological Survey; Mills College, Department of Biology; San Diego Natural History Museum; The Nature Conservancy;

Keywords: Ambrosia pumila; analysis of plans and recommendations; California gnatcatcher; chaparral; coastal sage scrub; community; grasslands; landscape; monitoring; MSCP; rare plants; San Diego;