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Monitoring Ecological Condition at Regional Scales - Proceedings of the Third Symposium on the Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP) Albany, NY, U.S.A., 8-11 April, 1997 (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1998)
Shabeg S. Sandhu, Laura Jackson, Kay Austin, Jeffrey Hyland, Brian D. Melzian, …
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R1,570
Discovery Miles 15 700
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program was created by
EPA to develop the capability for tracking the changing conditions
of our natural resources and to give environmental policy the
advantages ofa sound scientific understanding of trends. Former EPA
Administrators recognized early that contemporary monitoring
programs could not even quantify simple unknowns like the number of
lakes suffering from acid rain, let along determine if national
control policies were benefiting these lakes. Today, adding to
acidification impacts are truly complex problems such as
determining the effects of climate change, of increases in
ultraviolet light, toxic chemicals, eutrophication and critical
habitat loss. Also today, the Government Performance and Results
Act seeks to have agencies develop performance standards based on
results rather than simply on levels of programmatic activities.
The charge to EMAP of ecosystems is, therefore, the same today as
it was a with respect to measuring the condition decade ago. We
welcome the increasing urgency for sound scientific monitoring
methods and data by efforts to protect and improve the environment.
Systematic nationwide monitoring of natural resources is more than
anyone program can accomplish, however. In an era of declining
budgets, it is crucial that monitoring programs at all levels of
government coordinate and share environmental data. EMAP resources
are dwarfed by the more than $500 million spent on federal
monitoring activities each year.
Patient 12 is set in an office in a Melbourne military hospital, in
the years immediately following World War I. The play examines a
neglected period of Australia's history through the prism of the
kith and kin of those who went to war and either failed to return,
or came back physically and/or emotionally scarred.
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