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B-IBI Recalibration
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B-IBI Recalibration
Enhancement and Standardization of Benthic Macroinvertebrate Monitoring and Analysis
Tools for the Puget Sound Region
Summary
With funding from an EPA grant from 2010-2014, King County worked with regional partners and experts to enhance data analysis tools and encourage collaboration and standardization for benthic macroinvertebrate monitoring in the Puget Sound region. This project built on and updated the widely used multi-metric Puget Lowland benthic index of biotic integrity (B-IBI) initially developed in the early 1990’s to report stream health. Field collection methods were compared, taxa attributes were updated based on scientific literature or were empirically derived, and the B-IBI was recalibrated based on a spatially extensive data set representative of the Puget Sound region using a refined scoring techniques. The new taxa attributes and recalibrated B-IBI were incorporated into the Puget Sound Stream Benthos (PSSB) data management system. In addition, the entities using the PSSB and the breadth of data in the PSSB increased.
Key Project Accomplishments
- Updated taxa attribute lists (long-lived, predator, clinger) with new scientific information; updated intolerant and tolerant taxa attributes with empirically-derived data from over 700 sites in the Puget Sound region.
- Adjusted B‑IBI metric scores so that the final B‑IBI is based on continuous scoring without gaps, has strong signal to noise discrimination, and is independent of taxonomic effort.
- Confirmed comparability of regional macroinvertebrate data collected from different sampling surface area protocols used by various entities in the Puget Sound region.
- Verified that natural site features do not add a consistent source of bias for B‑IBI.
- Evaluated the biological risks of common aquatic stressors, which revealed stressors related to substrate and water quality were the most influential to B‑IBI scores.
- Enhanced the analytical capabilities and functionality of the PSSB database management system by incorporating updated attributes, taxonomic levels, and B‑IBI scoring; new and historical B‑IBI data added to the PSSB.
- Increased multi-agency participation and partnership within the Puget Sound region as demonstrated by attendance and participation in field and PSSB trainings and regional workshops.
Primary Project Outcomes
This project supported collaboration and assessment at the regional level by:
- Hosting regional workshops to share how agencies and jurisdictions are using biological data;
- Providing training for field collection and data management via the PSSB;
- Connecting people and programs at the local, state, tribal and federal levels; and
- Improving B-IBI to support status and trends and NPDES stormwater permit monitoring as recommended by the Puget Sound Stormwater Workgroup to the Washington Department of Ecology.
Current Collaboration
To date the project has engaged with over 100 individuals from almost 50 organizations
including:
- 18 cities
- 15 tribes
- 7 counties
- 3 state or regional entities
- 6 not-for-profit organizations
- 6 federal agencies
Project Contacts
For more information contact: