Science Advisors
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The Executive Coordinator is contractor to Reclamation
- Maintains a Standing Panel of Advisors (aka Expert Panel)
- Schedules Independent Review Panel(s) if/as needed
- Helps with Knowledge Assessments (3-year process)
- Has routine interactions with Reclamation, GCMRC, TWG, AMWG
(FY 2018-2020 TWP, Reclamation Budget Item C.4)
David P. Braun, Ph.D.
Executive Coordinator for Science Advisors, U.S. Department of Interior,
Bureau of Reclamation, Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program,
and Senior Associate, Sound Science, LLC
www.sound-science.org
[email protected]
(973) 568-7676
Skype: david.p.braun (timezone=Eastern U.S.)
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SAP Expert Panel, FY 2018-2020
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Five-person “blue-ribbon” panel
- Replaces/updates former Science Advisors panel (FY01-14)
- Three-year (FY) terms of office, not staggered
FY18-20 Expert Panel tasks (planned)
- Review GCMRC annual reports, annual reporting meeting presentations (FY18, 19, 20), annual work plans (FY 19, 20)
- Advise, review triennial Knowledge Assessment (FY 19-20)
- Review next draft Triennial Work Plan and Budget (FY20)
- Advise on possible external IRPs (if/as needed)
- Advise on recruitment of next 3-year (FY21-23) cohort of Expert Panel (FY20)
Current Status
Updating operating protocols
- Based on AMP-approved GCMRC procedures FY01-14
- Updating for Reclamation administration
- Reclamation now reviewing recommendations
Identifying disciplinary areas of expertise needed
- NOT just sciences; all key areas of knowledge that inform adaptive management
- Reclamation will make final selection; suggestions welcome
Identifying and recruiting panel members
- To begin once disciplinary needs set; nominations welcome
- Candidate review process to follow FY01-14 guidelines as applicable
- Reclamation will make final selection
Next Steps
Identify disciplinary areas of expertise needed
- End of February?
- Reclamation will establish review team
Finish updating operating protocols (February-March)
Nominations
- Mid-March or longer (?)
- Reclamation will establish review team
- Recruiting, March-April
- Orientation, late April?
- Review GCMRC FY 2017 Annual Report, 2018 Annual Reporting Meeting content, April-May [2]
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Links
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Projects
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- Independent review of NPS “Bright Angel Creek Comprehensive Nonnative Trout Control 5-year Assessment, 2012-2017” draft final report to Reclamation
- Independent review of September 2017 Brown Trout workshop final report
- 2016 Fisheries PEP
- 2016 Knowledge Assessment
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Presentations and Papers
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2018
2017
2016
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2000
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Goals
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- FROM: Anne Castle
- DATE: March 31, 2011
- RE: "GCMRC Science Planning"
- "Our first and foremost priority is compliance with the Endangered Species Act, which means focus on the native fish and particularly the humpback chub.
- "Second, we need to focus on sediment, which was an instigating factor for the Grand Canyon Protection Act and continues to be an issue with resources down stream of the dam..."
- "Third, and these are competing priorities, we need science on both non-native fish control and the recreational trout fishery.
- "These are the primary areas where I have asked GCMRC to concentrate its resources."
- "We need a science that empowers decision makers to develop a comprehensive vision of how a future Colorado River can function."
- "We have the ability to recreate any kind of a river we want. We just have to decide what we want and where we want it, and to decide if we want to pay for it.(JSchmit_SDM-workshop_Aug 2013)
- Although meta-analysis is a useful way of summarizing knowledge, the strength of inference depends on the quality of the data, and cause-and-effect cannot be established solely from correlative analyses. [3]
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