
Date: Dec. 18, 2002
Contacts: Bill Kearney, Media Relations Officer
Andrea Durham, Media Relations Assistant
Office of News and Public Information
(202) 334-2138; e-mail <news@nas.edu>
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Funding for Everglades Research Should Increase,
Contingent Upon Management Changes
WASHINGTON -- A U.S. Department of the Interior research
program has provided key information to help guide the ecological restoration
effort in the Florida Everglades, but the program's current funding is
inadequate, its management needs to be improved, and its findings should be more
broadly disseminated, says a new report from the National Academies' National
Research Council. The panel that wrote the report noted that strategic
investments in research should increase the likelihood of reaching the
restoration effort's goals while reducing its overall cost.
The Critical Ecosystem Studies Initiative, or CESI, was
established by the Interior Department in 1997 to fill gaps in what is known
about the environment of the Everglades. Managers of the Comprehensive
Everglades Restoration Plan -- a multibillion dollar effort involving many
federal and state agencies -- use this information to support planning and
design decisions that affect land owned by the Interior Department. The annual
budget for CESI has fallen, however, from a high of $12 million in 1998 to its
current level of just $4 million. Congress requested the Research Council study
after concerns were raised about this drop in funding and its impact on the
adequacy of the science being conducted.
"Funding for the science program has been inconsistent and is
now far less than is needed to support Interior's interests and responsibilities
for the restoration effort," said panel chair Linda Blum, research associate
professor, department of environmental sciences, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville.
Congress should increase CESI funding provided that several
management fixes are put in place first, the panel said. For example, CESI
managers should widen the field of applicants for research grants by more
broadly distributing calls for research proposals. They should also recruit more
independent experts to review research proposals and findings.
New research could be conducted right away by CESI to meet
some of the more pressing science needs of the restoration project, the panel
added. This includes social-science and water-quality research, as well as
further study of how changes in hydrology affect various species at the
individual and population levels.
For the results of CESI science to prove useful, they must be
synthesized and broadly disseminated to everyone involved in the restoration
effort. However, the panel said that synthesis is notably lacking in CESI as
well as in other Everglades science programs. CESI should improve its synthesis
and dissemination, but because it is just one of several ongoing research
programs that support the restoration project, a single overarching science
entity is needed to make sure that all Everglades-related research is available
to those who need it. This entity would also promote collaboration and provide
scientific vision for the restoration effort.
CESI researchers must be more responsive to the compressed
timetable of the restoration plan, the panel said. And restoration managers
should evaluate the risks and benefits of adjusting their current project
schedule in order to obtain answers to critical scientific questions.
The restoration plan already includes an organization, known
as the RECOVER team, that communicates scientific results to the project
planners and engineers. But steps need to be taken to ensure that a sufficient
number of scientists, representing all involved agencies, participate in the
process, the report notes. Congress should consider how to formalize a
significant role for the Interior Department on RECOVER while maintaining the
input of other restoration stakeholders, the panel said.
The study was sponsored by the U.S. Department of the
Interior. The National Research Council is the principal operating arm of the
National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering. It is a
private, nonprofit institution that provides science and technology advice under
a congressional charter. A committee roster follows.
Copies of
Science and the Greater Everglades Ecosystem Restoration: An Assessment of the
Critical Ecosystem Studies Initiative
will be available early next year from the National
Academies Press; tel. (202) 334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242 or on the Internet at
http://www.nap.edu. Reporters may obtain a
pre-publication copy from the Office of News and Public Information (contacts
listed above).
[ This news release and report are available at
http://national-academies.org ]
click here to return to National Academies Report December 18, 2002