Article

Inventory and Monitoring


At national parks across the nation, the Inventory & Monitoring Program is dedicated to providing managers with the information they need to make sound, science-based decisions that will help support the National Park Service mission of preserving the resources of America’s most special and treasured places for future generations.


Un cactus de flores rosadas.
Fishhook cactus in bloom. Inventory and monitoring of vegetation communities are pivotal components of the I&M Program.

Background

Each day, National Park Service (NPS) managers make decisions with the potential to affect park resources for years to come. But in the past, many park managers lacked even baseline information about which resources were in the parks—let alone about the overall state of the ecosystem. This lack of reliable data often made informed decisionmaking difficult.

The NPS Natural Resource Inventory & Monitoring (I&M) Program was created by Congressional mandate in 1998, with the purpose of providing park managers with a broad-based understanding about the status and trends of natural resources to be used in management decisionmaking, working with other agencies, and communicating with the public. The I&M program includes more than 270 national parks with significant natural resources organized into 32 ecoregional networks where natural resource inventory and monitoring activities are conducted.

Today, all I&M networks collect, analyze, synthesize, and supply park managers with reliable scientific information about key park resources, known as “vital signs.” Vital signs are a subset of physical, chemical, and biological elements and processes of park ecosystems that are selected to represent the overall health or condition of park resources, known or hypothesized effects of stressors, or elements that have important human values.

The primary goals of the I&M Program are to:

  • Inventory National Park Service natural resources to determine their nature and status.
  • Monitor park ecosystems to better understand their dynamic nature and condition and provide reference points for comparison with other environments.
  • Establish natural resource inventory and monitoring as a standard practice throughout the National Park System that transcends traditional program, activity, and funding boundaries.
  • Integrate natural resource inventory and monitoring information into National Park Service planning, management, and decisionmaking.
  • Share National Park Service accomplishments and information with other natural resource organizations and form partnerships for attaining common goals and objectives.
An eagle flying, a person examining soil composition, and a mass of frog's eggs
Although each I&M network monitors its own unique set of vital signs, many networks have vital signs in common. Birds, soils, and aquatic systems are examples of natural resources frequently monitored by the networks.

ROBERT BENNETS; NPS; NPS

Highlights and Accomplishments

Baseline natural resource inventories are extensive, point-in-time surveys to determine the location or condition of resources in national parks, including the presence, class, distribution, and status of biological resources, such as plants and animals, and information on abiotic resources, such as air, water, soils, landforms, and climate.

The I&M Program has developed and delivered baseline inventory datasets to more than 270 parks, and continues to fund and develop inventories to meet the highest-priority needs of the parks. These inventories provide the foundation for long-term vital signs monitoring.

Vital signs monitoring provides scientifically sound information on the condition and trend of park natural resources. Monitoring has been implemented in all 32 networks to address physical resources and processes (e.g., air, water, climate, soils, fire, erosion), biological attributes (e.g., species, communities), and ecological processes (e.g., disturbance, productivity).

Map of the United States with the 32 Inventory and Monitoring Networks. Network boundaries cross state lines; for example, the Gulf Coast Network includes parts of coastal Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida.
The 32 I&M ecoregional networks include more than 270 National Park Service units with significant natural resources. The 32 networks share core funding and a professional staff to inventory park natural resources and conduct long-term monitoring of park ecosystems.

Each network has implemented a monitoring program tailored to the highest needs of its parks by defining network goals and objectives, identifying and prioritizing potential vital signs, and selecting a modest set of vital signs for long-term monitoring. Criteria used in the final selection of vital signs included ecological significance, management relevance, and legal mandate.

Data and information management based on state-of-the-art standards and practices is a hallmark of the I&M Program. Each network utilizes a comprehensive data management system that protects and enhances the long-term value of monitoring data. All networks and the national program office have made a sustained and substantial investment in database design, data archiving, and in reporting data and derived information.

Status and Future

The highly collaborative nature of the I&M effort has resulted in an integrative, park-based program with strong connections between natural resources inventory and monitoring information and park management. The results of inventories and monitoring performed to date are being used in resource management decisionmaking and planning efforts, resource condition assessments, general park planning documents, park interpretation, and other public outreach efforts.

Those results are made available to managers, planners, interpreters, scientists, and the general public via websites, technical reports, resource briefs, journal publications, presentations, and social media.

As we look to the future, park managers across the country will face increasingly complex and challenging management issues, driven in part and in particular by landscape- and even global-scale factors, such as climate change. The data collection, analysis, synthesis, and reporting performed by the I&M Program will provide early warning of ecosystem changes, with the goal of allowing park managers to develop effective mitigation measures and reduce management costs as they continue to preserve and protect America’s irreplaceable natural heritage and treasures.

Learn more

Showing results 1-10 of 166

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: New River Gorge National Park & Preserve
    • Offices: Eastern Rivers and Mountains Inventory & Monitoring Network, Inventory and Monitoring Division
    A bat flying along a rockface.

    The NPS Inventory and Monitoring Division partnered with New River Gorge National Park and Preserve to study how bats use cliff habitats that overlap with climbing routes, aiming to understand whether recreation might unintentionally disturb sensitive wildlife.

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Lava Beds National Monument
    • Offices: Inventory and Monitoring Division, Klamath Inventory & Monitoring Network
    Bright green lichen growing on volcanic rock in Lava Beds National Monument.

    At Lava Beds National Monument, a species inventory helps park managers understand the rich diversity of lichens in the park, allowing them to craft management strategies to preserve lichens. Located in a semi-arid zone of northern California, cave lichens represent a unique floral component for the region and include many rare or little-known species.

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Fort Necessity National Battlefield
    • Offices: Eastern Rivers and Mountains Inventory & Monitoring Network, Inventory and Monitoring Division
    A side-view of a small rabbit with brown and black fur seated on the ground.

    Fort Necessity National Battlefield park staff aimed to find out if Appalachian cottontail inhabited the park, so they collaborated with the Inventory and Monitoring Division to survey for their scat.

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Black Canyon Of The Gunnison National Park, Curecanti National Recreation Area
    • Offices: Inventory and Monitoring Division, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Directorate, Northern Colorado Plateau Inventory & Monitoring Network
    Two field crew members measure vegetation in a dry, grassy landscape.

    At Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park and Curecanti National Recreation Area, long-term vegetation monitoring provides park managers with useful information for decision making on topics including changes in climate, grazing, and fire management. A recent report summarizes monitoring from 2011 to 2022 of vegetation and soil conditions provides management recommendations for their conservation.

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Curecanti National Recreation Area
    • Offices: Inventory and Monitoring Division, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Directorate, Northern Colorado Plateau Inventory & Monitoring Network
    Oxeye daisies partially along the shoreline of Blue Mesa Reservoir in Curecanti NRA.

    Invasive exotic plants are one of the most significant threats to natural resources in the national parks today. To provide early warning of weed invasions, the Northern Colorado Plateau Network monitors target plants in park areas where they are likely to first establish: along roads, trails, and waterways. Find out what we've learned at Curecanti National Recreation Area.

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Minute Man National Historical Park
    • Offices: Inventory and Monitoring Division, Northeast Temperate Inventory & Monitoring Network
    A small green bee foraging on a white and yellow daisy.

    The National Park Service (NPS) is on a mission to deepen its understanding of the bees living in parks. Traditional survey methods require significant time, specialized expertise, and the collection of specimens from their natural habitats for species-level identification. With limited bee specialists available and a growing need for efficient, cost-effective methods, the NPS sought an alternative approach.

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Rocky Mountain National Park
    • Offices: Inventory and Monitoring Division, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Directorate, Rocky Mountain Inventory & Monitoring Network
    Melting snow in a shallow, gravel depression, with a snow-capped mountain in the background.

    Climate change has the potential to profoundly alter national parks, affecting plants, animals, and cultural resources. During this time of unusually rapid change, proactive management—planning ahead—has a better chance of success than reacting to crises after they arise. This article compares historical climate patterns at Rocky Mountain National Park with future projected conditions to help park managers proactively plan for climate change.

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Acadia National Park, Appalachian National Scenic Trail, Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area, Eleanor Roosevelt National Historic Site, Home Of Franklin D Roosevelt National Historic Site,
    • Offices: Inventory and Monitoring Division
    A tree with roots that go deep into the soil

    From underground mycorrhizal networks to ultrasonic sound emissions and chemical signaling through the air. The plants and trees of the forest have a language and ability to communicate that science is only beginning to understand.

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Craters Of The Moon National Monument & Preserve
    • Offices: Inventory and Monitoring Division, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Directorate, Upper Columbia Basin Inventory & Monitoring Network
    A person atop a mule while another mules follows behind

    Along Idaho’s U.S. Highway 26, National Park Service ecologists are enhancing the efficiency of sagebrush restoration and teaming up with a long-time partner of mankind: the mule.

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Curecanti National Recreation Area
    • Offices: Inventory and Monitoring Division, Northern Colorado Plateau Inventory & Monitoring Network
    A view of the Curecanti reservoir.

    Northern Colorado Plateau Network’s scientists use satellite observations of vegetation condition in Curecanti National Recreation Area with climate data over time to reveal how climate influences plant production and phenology. Knowing which of the wide range of 16 vegetation assemblages found in Curecanti are more or less sensitive to climate change can help managers understand what to expect over the next few decades, and plan for the changes coming their way.

Last updated: December 20, 2024