The ECOFIA Initiative

ECOFIA Ecological approach to 
Forest resource Inventory and Analysis.
 
Ecosystem assessments in the United States and elsewhere require timely and accurate resource condition information. Data needs undergo continuous evolution. To remain effective, current measurement and analysis strategies must link past data for monitoring with advancing technology, new inventory needs, and evolving ecological objectives. What is ECOFIA?
  • Progress So Far
  • Related Developments
  • Draft Recommendations
  • Recent Publications
  • Steering committee
  • 1993 Forest Type Map 
  • U.S. Forest Distribution Map

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    ECOFIA welcomes your input at any time. Page "hits" for the year following its 1995 March 22 launch: about 6,000. Accesses Calendar Year 2002: [an error occurred while processing this directive] times. Send comments and suggestions about this WWW page to: vrudis@ra.msstate.edu. Last modified: 2002 March 8 by Vic Rudis.
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    What is ECOFIA?

    Since the 1930's, the USDA Forest Service, Forest Inventory and Analysis Program (FIA) conducted inventories and assessed the status and change in forest resources. Today FIA is the chief provider of forest statistics on broad geographic scales, notably tree growth, mortality, and harvest rates, tree species and land use patterns, forested wildlife habitat, forest health, and associated human activities. Selected data are organized nationally in the Resources Planning Act RPA Database. The FIA program monitors a grid of approximately 6.5 million photo points and over 400,000 sample locations on private and public land across the United States. The field sample grid is being extended to western National Forests and selected reserved areas throughout the United States. In addition, FIA periodically conducts questionnaire surveys of forest owners and consumptive forest uses.

    FIA's measurement strategy has shifted toward more holistic assessments with advancing technology and evolving objectives of the program's clientele, e.g., 1993 FIA/AVHRR Forest Type Map Refer to http://www.fia.fs.fed.us for maps or other contact information.

    In 1993, FIA staff scientists launched an initiative to accelerate the shift toward holistic assessments that support ecosystem management, a concept increasingly adopted by land management agencies, corporations, and individuals. The goals of the initiative are to better utilize the historic information wealth captured by FIA surveys, provide support for standardized national appraisals, and explore new inventory designs to estimate vegetation composition, structure, and processes at the species, community, and landscape scales. This initiative is now known as "ECOFIA."

    Progress So Far
    A Steering Committee comprised of one member of each regional FIA and the Washington Office assembled for a start-up meeting at the Intermountain FIA Unit in Ogden, Utah, November 1993. The meeting resulted in an action plan and a white paper describing the initiative.

    After circulating the white paper and gathering review comments, the committee convened a National Information Needs Workshop in Portland, Oregon, May 1994. Attended by an array of FIA's clientele, attendees made presentations on their use of inventory information and emphasized what they felt could be changed or added to the inventory to satisfy their needs. No sideboards were put on the discussions and many viewpoints were offered. Once presentations were complete, attendees grouped and summarized suggestions.

    After the meeting, Steering Committee members further synthesized comments into a Portland Summary. Members met again in September of 1994 and drafted a set of recommendations covering inventory, design, and operational issues. Recommendations then went through a thorough internal review. Scientists, inventory and data processing staff from each regional FIA had the opportunity to provide comments and suggest revisions.

    With the internal review complete, draft recommendations are being circulated to over 500 individuals and organizations with a stake in FIA information. External reviews will be compiled into a book of comments to assist in finalizing recommendations for a national FIA program.

    ECOFIA has added members to the Steering Committee to represent the interests of the National Forest System, serves as a subgroup within the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP), and has a liaison role with related US Government ecological monitoring efforts.

    Related Developments
    There are other ongoing developments that will have significant impact on Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) activities. Perhaps the most important is the current administration's Reinventing Government Campaign.

    First, the Department of Agriculture, along with the Forest Service, is on the leading edge of reinvention. The current proposals for reinventing the Forest Service call for major realignments of regional boundaries and leadership staffing.

    Second, an umbrella organization within Forest Service Research is being created to integrate all of the Forest Service's inventory activities. FIA is expected to have a leadership role in the new entity.

    Another idea discussed is linking the FIA program with other federal inventory efforts, particularly the Natural Resource Conservation (formerly Soil Conservation) Service's National Resource Inventory, much closer in the past. FIA is also expected to expand ties with the Department of Interior's National Biological Survice (NBS). As with the other developments, the full impact on FIA activities is currently unknown. Details on reinvention have not been worked out, but the current plan calls for implementation within two years.

    Draft Recommendations
    Recommendations contained herein will enhance the ecological basis for forest inventory and monitoring conducted by the USDA Forest Service's Forest Inventory and Analysis Program (FIA). The recommendations list inventory items or processes that can be:

    1. handled immediately at minimal cost, termed data elements, and
    2. accomplished with additional research, termed research needs.
    All items are contingent upon strong national direction and inter-regional cooperation.

    VISION STATEMENT: To conduct research to inventory, classify, and monitor the vegetation of ecosystems with trees at multiple spatial and temporal scales in a scientifically credible and consistent manner across the Nation. Data are well documented and accessible.

    The Top Priorities: Consistency and Compatibility
    The central concept of recommendations is that implementation of a "core" set of consistently defined, measured, compiled, and analyzed data elements is the most fundamental requirement for success in taking an ecological approach to our national inventory. Although FIA's timber-related measurements are not emphasized here, we recognize that timber resource attributes are integral to FIA's mission and need to be reviewed for relevancy and consistency among FIA regions as new approaches are implemented.

    We recommend 8 standards to ensure operational consistency and compatibility:

    1. National standard field measurements and manuals.
    2. National standard sample location design and sampling intensity.
    3. Wall-to-Wall coverage with a focus on all land with trees.
    4. Geo-reference all sample locations.
    5. Uniform coding - tie to the Federal Common Survey Data Structure project.
    6. Inventory at the interface of land with trees and land without trees needs to be worked out with the relevant authority.
    7. Implement and document national "Quality Assurance/Quality Control" methodology consistently for all regions.
    8. Units need to stress the temporal, long-term research aspects of FIA surveys, i.e., conduct remeasurements of permanent sample locations and maintain all historical data in modern formats.

    Inventory Design

    Specific design recommendations: Data elements are items that can be implemented nationally with only minor compatibility research and emphasis on consistency and coordination, principally among regional FIA projects. Research needs are items for national implementation once efficient and credible procedures are developed. Collaborative development among other research organizations may be required to address these needs, particularly among federal agencies with inventory and monitoring responsibilities.

    Remote Sensing & GIS - Phase I

    Data Elements:
    Research Needs:

    Field Measurement - Phase II

    Sample location
    Data Elements:
    Research Needs:
    Species
    Data Elements:
    Research Needs:

    Processing and Analysis

    Process Elements:
    Research Needs:

    Marketing Strategy

    The Forest Service's forest inventory and analysis program (FIA and NFS monitoring) needs a strategy to increase its visibility and better communicate its role to other individuals, agencies, and organizations.

    Recent FIA Publications
    ECOFIA Steering Committee. 1993. An ecological approach for the inventory, analysis, and monitoring of the Nation's forests. White paper available from steering committee members. 8 p.

    For 1976-2001 citations using FIA data, see the bibliography project. For recent citations selected for their ecological content and written by FIA staff or associated with FIA data uses, click here. For information about how to subscribe, obtain paper or electronic copies of FIA Resource Bulletins, other publications, or other programs of the USDA Forest Service research institutes, see: http://www.msstate.edu/dept/forestry/USDAFSresearchpubs.htm

    ECOFIA Contacts: To comment on this home page, click here.
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    Compiled by Vic Rudis.