Adaptive management

An adaptive approach to management is required whenever decisions about how to achieve a complex goal must be made under uncertainty. This almost always applies to ecosystem recovery because desired outcomes (such as responses of species to remedial actions), and driving factors (such as the behavior of humans, and weather-dependent processes) often cannot be predicted. When these factors interact with each other uncertainty is compounded. Progress therefore entails a deliberate ‘learn-and-adjust-as-you-go’ approach that has become known as adaptive management (AM). 

--Source: Georgiadis, N. (2016). Adaptive Management: What, Why, and How? Tacoma, WA: University of Washington Puget Sound Institute.

Overview

A "learn and adjust" strategy known as adaptive management plays a central role in state and federal Puget Sound recovery efforts. It is an approach that is gaining traction for ecosystem management worldwide. A December 2016 article from the Puget Sound Institute provides an overview of the concept and how it is being applied locally. 

Steps in the Adaptive Management cycle. Figure 1 from  the article.

Related Articles

A "learn and adjust" strategy known as adaptive management plays a central role in state and federal Puget Sound recovery efforts. It is an approach that is gaining traction for ecosystem management worldwide. A December 2016 article from the Puget Sound Institute provides an overview of the concept and how it is being applied locally. 

The Puget Sound Action Agenda is a shared plan for Puget Sound recovery resulting from a collaboration by state and federal agencies, tribal governments, local governments, business and environmental groups, and others. 

This 2009-2011 Puget Sound Biennial Science Work Plan details the high-priority science activities required to: support the implementation of the Action Agenda; build capacity to revise and improve future Action Agendas; and enhance the Puget Sound Partnership’s ability to lead the ecosystem protection and restoration effort.

This report, Priority science for restoring and protecting Puget Sound: a Biennial Science Work Plan for 2011-2013, identifies priority science and monitoring questions needed to coordinate and implement effective recovery and protection strategies for Puget Sound.

This Action Plan (2012) describes the status of this inter-agency approach and highlights key actions agencies are taking.

The Puget Sound Action Agenda lays out the work needed to protect and restore Puget Sound into the future. It is intended to drive investment and action. The 2012 Action Agenda is the result of over a year of work with state and federal agencies, tribal governments, local governments, representatives of the business and environmental caucuses, and other interested partners. It builds on the first Action Agenda, created in 2008, and progress since then.