Marine environmental monitoring programs: tips on design, measurement and interpretation
John Russell HanleySinclair Knight Merz
The APPEA Journal 52(1) 317-326 https://doi.org/10.1071/AJ11024
Published: 2012
Abstract
Marine environmental monitoring programs are these days a standard requirement for the oil and gas industry in all jurisdictions. Monitoring programs are generally required during the construction and siting of infrastructure in or near the marine environment and then also for the operational phases of that infrastructure.
The types and scales of monitoring programs developed and implemented vary enormously from project to project and typically reflect the complex interplay between often competing factors such as legislative framework, environmental and political sensitivities, cost, industry standards, existing information, predicted levels of impact, access to technology, and the level of professional expertise engaged.
With so many factors influencing the design of a program it is sometimes difficult to focus on the core requirements of any marine environmental monitoring program.
Using case examples this paper provides some advice on choosing which potential impacts are important to monitor, developing a good study design (including the importance of baseline data collection and pilot studies), choosing the right parameters to monitor, avoiding the seduction of technology, and selecting appropriate statistical tests.
The other topic covered is some advice on the interpretation of results with emphasis on the need for clarity at the beginning of a monitoring program about what the data collected will, or can, be used for.
(John) Russell Hanley holds a PhD from Macquarie University and is now employed by Sinclair Knight Merz as an executive marine scientist. He has 30 years’ experience in Australia and the tropical Indo-West Pacific region as a marine ecologist during which time he has worked as a research scientist, a public servant assessing development proposals, a freelance consultant providing specialist advice, and lately as practice leader for the marine and coastal science team at SKM. He was also recently the technical director on the Gorgon marine monitoring program. Russell is an adjunct Associate Professor in the Natural Sciences Department of Edith Cowan University. Member: Australian Coral Reef Society and the Australian Marine Sciences Association. jhanley@globalskm.com |