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The ATBI in the Smokies: An Overview

Peter White and Keith Langdon

© 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

  • THERE IS A FUNDAMENTAL FLAW in how most parks and other natural reserves have been managed. In general, we have ignored a basic principle that would be fatal in the competitive world of business: we have never attempted a comprehensive inventory of our resources.

  • This is surprising since the clearly stated purpose of most governmental and non-governmental conservation organizations has always been to protect and preserve the natural and cultural resources entrusted to their stewardship.

  • How can we be intelligent stewards if we do not even know what kinds of resources we have, where they are found, their rarity, or, in the case of natural resources, some inkling of their ecological role?
Mouse Creek Falls.
Mouse Creek Falls.
Click image to enlarge.
Photo by Charles Wilder.

What is an ATBI?

  • It is important to understand that the goals of an ATBI include compiling species lists, but lists by themselves are of little direct conservation value. An ATBI collects information on habitat, distribution, time and date of occurrence for the species observed, abundance, and where possible, life history information.

  • All groups are included and eventually targeted for research, but no one is under the illusion that every single species will be found. This is impractical even for a smaller reserve, and not a primary goal of an ATBI (see The Science Approach to the Smokies ATBI).
Cosberella lamaralexanderi, one of the springtail species new to science found by the ATBI.

Click photo to enlarge.
Photo courtesy of Ernest Bernard / DLIA.

The inventory in the Smokies

A Blackbelly salamander inhabits a creek crossing the Grassy Branch Trail.
Blackbelly salamader.
Click photo to enlarge.
Photo by Charles Wilder.
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park is known for its biological diversity, especially in some familiar, charismatic groups, such as salamanders and vascular plants. But with its physical and geographic characteristics, it seemed probable that most of the park’s natural wealth of species had yet to be discovered.

  • There have been many past scientific efforts in the park which have provided excellent information on resources, but many of these were often sporadic and serendipitous, providing only minor relevant data for stewardship purposes, since that was ancillary to the research hypothesis being tested. At the rate we were accumulating inventory data in the past, it was roughly estimated that it would take about 150 years to complete a basic inventory of species in all groups of life. Clearly we did not have nearly that much time.

The Science Plan (see Science Plan)

What explains patterns of diversity and distribution?

How should an ATBI be done?

  • Structured sampling, ecological zip codes, and accessibility. By contrast, structured collecting and observing adds a systematic sampling approach in which biodiversity reference areas or plots are arrayed against the environmental factors that correlate with species distributions.

  • The work of USGS researcher Chuck Parker in developing and testing passive structured sampling protocols has sharpened our understanding of the value and difficulty of this approach (see The Science Approach to the Smokies ATBI). It is difficult to develop protocols that aim to maximize collection of taxa, while minimizing collection of specimens and impacts, for the least effort and expense.
Igor, Vlad, and Charles hang a flight intercept trap during the 2006 Beetle Blitz at White Oak Sink.
Igor, Vlad, and Charles hang a flight intercept trap.
Click photo to enlarge.
Photo courtesy of Laura Childers / DLIA.

Summary

  • However, our society is steadily diverging away from actually experiencing nature, let alone developing an intimate knowledge and appreciation of it. This is especially true of our children (Louv 2005).

  • ATBIs could stand on their own for science and reserve protection reasons, but with the many pressures facing today’s societies, the long-term survival of natural systems inside and outside of reserves is probable only if the public and especially youth have those connections. So ATBIs are also carried out for educational purposes, to share that sense of discovery.

  • At right, a land snail feeds on microorganisms found on a fern along the Appalachian Trail.
    • Click photo to enlarge.
      Photo by Charles Wilder.
Land snail feeds on microorganisms.

References

Janzen, D. H. and W. Hallwachs. 1994. All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory (ATBI) of Terrestrial Systems: A Generic Protocol for Preparing Wildland Biodiversity for Non-Damaging Use. Report of a National Science Foundation Workshop, 16–18 April 1993, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. On-line at www.all-species.org/content/reference/ATBI_Fin_Rep_ 8feb94_.pdf.

Louv, R. 2005. Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books.

White, P., J. Morse, F. Harris, K. Langdon, R. Lowe, B. Nichols, C. Parker, J. Pickering, and M. Sharkey. 2000. The Science Plan for the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee.


Peter White, Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599; peter.white@unc.edu.

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