| Overview
Natural
resource inventorying is the process of acquiring information
on park resources, including the presence, distribution, and condition
of plants, animals, soils, water, air, geological features, biotic
communities, natural processes, and human-induced changes in those
resources. Inventories are designed to contribute to a statement
of the condition of park resources, which is best described in
relation to a standard condition such as natural or unimpaired.
Inventories involve both the compilation of existing information
and the acquisition of new information.
Park inventories include general and specific descriptive data
and historical records. Information collected includes things
like legal descriptions, climate information, land classifications,
topographic maps, watershed delineations, surficial and bedrock
geology maps, hydrologic information, water quality data, air
quality data, species lists, vegetation maps, documentation of
fires, insect, and disease infestations, etc.
In a world in which natural places have become few and precious,
knowledge of the composition and function of relatively unaltered
natural systems is invaluable. This program provides a fundamental
knowledge of those systems and the technical basis for “ecosystem
management”.
Natural resource inventories have three primary uses:
|
Documentation of the occurrence, location, and
condition of park resources |
|
Identification of rare, threatened, or endangered species
and ecosystems for purposes of directing management |
|
Development of a foundation for implementation of status
and trend or monitoring programs |
By clicking on the tabs displayed above, you will be taken to
a series of pages that describe specific information that pertains
to resource inventories here at Shenandoah National Park.
Shenandoah Monitoring Program Main
Page
Shenandoah
Natural Resources Main Page
National
Inventory Program
National
Monitoring Program
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