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Scientific Findings, Success Stories, Lessons Learned, and an Alliance of ATBIs

Keith Langdon, Charles Parker, and Becky Nichols

© 2006 The George Wright Society. All rights reserved. This article was first published in The George Wright Forum, the GWS's journal of parks, protected areas, and cultural sites. For more information, visit www.georgewright.org.

Introduction

  • THE MOST FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTION ABOUT THE ALL TAX BIODIVERSITY INVENTORY (ATBI) is “How many species have you found?” This is to be expected, as the ATBI is an inventory. The answer is presented in the “Taxa Table”.

  • However, when we are asked this question we always qualify our answer by stating the last date the table was updated. This is because the numbers change so frequently that keeping up is a major difficulty, but one we are pleased to be faced with.

  • Since this article was written, bio-quests have been held, scientists have visited the park independently to collect specimens, and additional samples have been processed from the pilot study backlog. So the answer has changed since the table below was produced—of that we can be certain.
Taxa Table
Taxa Table
Click table for latest taxa tally.

Success stories

Chris Carlton.
  • Professional recognition. The National Science Foundation (NSF) is the premier funding agency in the United States for scientific research. Traditionally, proposals submitted to NSF for funding have a success rate of less than 30%. ATBI cooperating scientists have received funding from NSF for five proposals specifically aimed at research in association with the Smokies ATBI.

  • These proposals involve pyrenomycetes (wood-inhabiting fungi); agarics (mushrooms and their relatives); algae, diatoms, and cyanobacteria (blue green algae); beetles; and the tree canopy biota. These grants total more than $1,500,000. The willingness of NSF to fund proposals to conduct research associated with the ATBI indicates that the reviewers are impressed with the scientific credentials of the scientists and the quality of their research, and also recognize that the ATBI is a legitimate scientific undertaking deserving of financial support.

  • At left, Chris Carlton introduces himself at the beginning of the 2006 Beetle Blitz.
    • Click photo to enlarge.
    • Photo by Ron McConathy.

Lessons learned

  • When the Smokies ATBI began, then-Superintendent Karen Wade observed that the undertaking was overwhelmingly an exercise in social engineering. With over 200 scientists (often assisted by students and technicians) and even larger numbers of citizen-scientists working on every facet of biodiversity in the park over the past eight years, great attention to detail is required to ensure that everything goes smoothly.

  • While many things have worked extremely well, not everything has. We have highlighted some of the difficulties encountered during the pilot study that led to changes in the manner in which the structured sampling will be conducted in the future. Below we reiterate those points, and provide some guidance based on other lessons learned at the Smokies and at other ATBI projects that we are aware of.

  • At right, volunteers practice sorting specimens at a DLIA training session.

Click photo to enlarge.
Photo by Jeanie Hilten.

An Alliance of ATBIs (see ATBI Alliance)

  • This is what the Alliance of ATBIs is about. At this time, 19 reserves have begun exploring formally creating such an alliance. This includes 12 national parks, five Tennessee state parks, New York’s Adirondack Park, and Nantucket Island, a Nature Conservancy/Massachusetts preserve (Figure 1). This alliance has come about because of the many inquiries we have received about how the Smokies ATBI operates and how it may be implemented in other places. Each ATBI, although individually managed, would subscribe to a minimum number of common-sense standards in communications, data collection and management, results-sharing, joint fund-seeking, etc., and agree to actively participate in the governance of the Alliance. The professional staffs of each reserve must voluntarily buy in to the core principles that guide the project.
Figure 1. The Alliance of ATBIs.

Click map to enlarge.
Map by Twin Creeks Natural Resources Center GIS.

References

Aselmann, I., and P. J. Crutzen. 1989. Global distribution of natural freshwater wetlands, rice paddies, their net primary productivity, seasonality, and possible methane emissions. Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry 8, 307–358.

Bailey, R. G. 1989. Ecoregions of the continents. Map, 1:30,000,000. Washington, D.C.: United States Department of Agriculture–Forest Service.

Stein, B. A., L. S. Kutner, and J. S. Adams, eds. 2000. Precious Heritage: The Status of Biodiversity in the United States. New York: Oxford University Press.

Udvardy, M. D. F. 1975. A Classification of the Biogeographical Provinces of the World. IUCN Occasional Paper no. 18. Morges, Switzerland: International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.


Keith Langdon, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Resource Management and Science Division, 1314 Cherokee Orchard Road, Gatlinburg, Tennessee 37738; keith_langdon@nps.gov.

Charles Parker, U.S. Geological Survey Biological Resources Discipline, Great Smokies Field Station, 1314 Cherokee Orchard Road, Gatlinburg, Tennessee 37738; chuck_parker@usgs.gov.

Becky Nichols, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Resource Management and Science Division, 1314 Cherokee Orchard Road, Gatlinburg, Tennessee 37738; becky_nichols@nps.gov.


© 2006 The George Wright Society. All rights reserved. This article was first published in The George Wright Forum, the GWS's journal of parks, protected areas, and cultural sites. For more information, visit www.georgewright.org.