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Surveillance strategy
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How the Surveillance Strategy can help you
Funders or organisers of one or more biodiversity surveillance schemes:
The Strategy will help you to judge the value of your investment. The
overview of schemes
and
analysis of need and coverage
provides a ready comparison of the contribution of schemes to the wider framework of evidence generated on the different components of biodiversity. The Strategy also provides
practical tools
to help in reviewing your surveillance needs and deciding how to address them.
Participants in a surveillance scheme:
The
overview of schemes
gives you some impression of the importance of your work, and tells you about other initiatives you may want to get involved in; the results from some of these schemes helps you see how your work (and others) is used singly or with other surveillance to give more evidence about drivers and pressures on particular components of biodiversity; whilst the basis of the Surveillance Strategy may help you understand why schemes sometimes change.
Designers or reviewers of surveillance schemes:
The Key Principles paper provides guidance on efficient and effective surveillance design. The
overview of schemes
and
analysis of surveillance need and coverage
will help you identify real surveillance gaps to avoid duplication of effort, and possibly allow savings through sharing of sampling locations and analyses. The risk-based approach paper is likely to be helpful when designing surveillance for rare or scarce species or habitats. The
Surveillance Hierarchy
helps identify the most appropriate scale for surveillance according to the nature of the question, level of evidence required and scales and nature of impacts. The way in which JNCC reviewed
mammal surveillance
will also help in understanding how the surveillance strategy can be used in reviewing a scheme.
Policy maker needing information on the impacts of a particular pressure on biodiversity:
The
analysis of need and coverage
allows you to see how your needs fit with both the evidence needs for each of the main objectives and assess current coverage whilst the
overview of schemes
gives you further information on each of the main surveillance and monitoring schemes.
If there isn’t a single scheme addressing what you’re interested in, these documents can help you identify what mix of existing schemes may help give you the evidence you need without setting up a new scheme.
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