Opportunity ID: 156173

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: F12AS00106
Funding Opportunity Title: Northeast Coastal Refuges, Salt Marsh Integrity Assessment, Monitoring Protocol Development
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Environment
Natural Resources
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 1
Assistance Listings: 15.654 — Visitor Facility Enhancements – Refuges and Wildlife
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 2
Posted Date: Mar 20, 2012
Last Updated Date: Mar 20, 2012
Original Closing Date for Applications: Mar 29, 2012
Current Closing Date for Applications: Mar 29, 2012
Archive Date: Mar 30, 2012
Estimated Total Program Funding: $80,000
Award Ceiling: $100,000
Award Floor: $50,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: Public and State controlled institutions of higher education
Private institutions of higher education
Additional Information on Eligibility:

Additional Information

Agency Name: Fish and Wildlife Service
Description: THERE IS NO FULL ANNOUNCEMENT ASSOCIATED WITH THIS OPPORUTUNITY.

Salt marshes are ecotonal ecosystems that form the dominant transition zone between terrestrial
and marine communities and are critical for absorbing the energy of ocean storms and preserving
shorelines, improving water quality in bays and estuaries, providing nutrients to marine
food webs, and supplying critical habitat for both the reproduction of a suite of ocean species and
for use by an entire community of breeding and migratory birds. Wildlife species that depend on
salt marshes are some of the highest conservation priorities, many of which occur in coastal US
Fish and Wildlife Service, National Wildlife Refuges. Most salt marshes are impacted to some
extent by some type of anthropogenic alteration and are threatened by accelerated rates of sealevel. Understanding how best to measure the effects of these alterations on salt marsh condition and wildlife habitat quality of habitat were the focus of the project Development of a Salt Marsh Assessment Tool to Monitor System Integrity and Provide Management Priorities for WildlifeConservation in Response to a Hierarchy of Threats (Neckles et al. 2011). This project
identified monitoring metrics that were linked to both management and fundamental objectives
and tested each metric to determine which method (rapid vs. intensive) was most effective and
efficient.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Region 5 is now planning to implement the Salt Marsh
Integrity Monitoring Protocol (Neckles et al. 2011) to assess and track the condition of salt
marsh habitats on USFWS Refuges with salt marsh habitats. To assist in the development of this
long-term monitoring program we will draft a monitoring and test a monitoring protocol
following Oakley et al. (2003) and USFWS I and M Standards that will provide the details
necessary to fully implement the Salt Marsh Integrity monitoring in Region 5.
This protocol will develop refuge specific sampling designs for all refuges in USFWS Region 5
with salt marsh habitat (Rachel Carson, Parker River, RI Complex, Stewart B. McKinney,
Wertheim, Edwin B. Forsyth, Bombay Hook, Prime Hook, Chesapeake Bay Complex,
Chincoteague, Fisherman Island, and Eastern Shore of Virginia) and integrate all the previously
identified and tested metrics for monitoring salt marsh integrity.

Objectives:
1) Work cooperatively with USFWS staff to draft the Salt Marsh Integrity Monitoring Protocol;
2) Define monitoring objectives for each metric or suite of metrics;
3) Develop sampling designs for all USFWS Refuges in Region 5 with salt marsh habitat
that integrates existing sampling frames
4) Coordinate with the National Park Service, Northeast Coastal Barrier Inventory and
Monitoring Network to identify and enhance similarities in salt marsh condition
monitoring between refuges and parks;
5) Develop field sampling maps to be included in the appropriate SOPs;
6) Develop analytical procedures to analyze the monitoring data including the development
of a bird community integrity index that standardizes scores across all refuges;
7) Coordinate a pilot field implementation season (2012)
8) Draft protocol with all SOPs

Product Due Date: April 2013

Neckles, H. A., G. Guntenspergen, G. Shriver, N., Danz, W. Wiest, J. Nagel, and J. Olker. 2011.
Development of a Salt Marsh Assessment Tool to Monitor System Integrity and Provide
Management Priorities for Wildlife Conservation in Response to a Hierarchy of Threats.
Draft report submitted to USFWS Region 5.
Oakley, K. L., L. P. Thomas, and S. G. Fancy. 2003. Guidelines for longterm monitoring
protocols. Wildlife Society Bulletin 31: 1000 through 1003

Link to Additional Information: THERE IS NO FULL ANNOUNCEMENT ASSOCIATED WITH THIS OPPORTUNITY.
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Daffny Jones, 413-253-8595
daffny_jones@fws.gov

Email:daffny_jones@fws.gov

Version History

Version Modification Description Updated Date
Mar 20, 2012
Mar 20, 2012

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 2

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: F12AS00106
Funding Opportunity Title: Northeast Coastal Refuges, Salt Marsh Integrity Assessment, Monitoring Protocol Development
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Environment
Natural Resources
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 1
Assistance Listings: 15.654 — Visitor Facility Enhancements – Refuges and Wildlife
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 2
Posted Date: Mar 20, 2012
Last Updated Date: Mar 20, 2012
Original Closing Date for Applications: Mar 29, 2012
Current Closing Date for Applications: Mar 29, 2012
Archive Date: Mar 30, 2012
Estimated Total Program Funding: $80,000
Award Ceiling: $100,000
Award Floor: $50,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: Public and State controlled institutions of higher education
Private institutions of higher education
Additional Information on Eligibility:

Additional Information

Agency Name: Fish and Wildlife Service
Description: THERE IS NO FULL ANNOUNCEMENT ASSOCIATED WITH THIS OPPORUTUNITY.

Salt marshes are ecotonal ecosystems that form the dominant transition zone between terrestrial
and marine communities and are critical for absorbing the energy of ocean storms and preserving
shorelines, improving water quality in bays and estuaries, providing nutrients to marine
food webs, and supplying critical habitat for both the reproduction of a suite of ocean species and
for use by an entire community of breeding and migratory birds. Wildlife species that depend on
salt marshes are some of the highest conservation priorities, many of which occur in coastal US
Fish and Wildlife Service, National Wildlife Refuges. Most salt marshes are impacted to some
extent by some type of anthropogenic alteration and are threatened by accelerated rates of sealevel. Understanding how best to measure the effects of these alterations on salt marsh condition and wildlife habitat quality of habitat were the focus of the project Development of a Salt Marsh Assessment Tool to Monitor System Integrity and Provide Management Priorities for WildlifeConservation in Response to a Hierarchy of Threats (Neckles et al. 2011). This project
identified monitoring metrics that were linked to both management and fundamental objectives
and tested each metric to determine which method (rapid vs. intensive) was most effective and
efficient.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Region 5 is now planning to implement the Salt Marsh
Integrity Monitoring Protocol (Neckles et al. 2011) to assess and track the condition of salt
marsh habitats on USFWS Refuges with salt marsh habitats. To assist in the development of this
long-term monitoring program we will draft a monitoring and test a monitoring protocol
following Oakley et al. (2003) and USFWS I and M Standards that will provide the details
necessary to fully implement the Salt Marsh Integrity monitoring in Region 5.
This protocol will develop refuge specific sampling designs for all refuges in USFWS Region 5
with salt marsh habitat (Rachel Carson, Parker River, RI Complex, Stewart B. McKinney,
Wertheim, Edwin B. Forsyth, Bombay Hook, Prime Hook, Chesapeake Bay Complex,
Chincoteague, Fisherman Island, and Eastern Shore of Virginia) and integrate all the previously
identified and tested metrics for monitoring salt marsh integrity.

Objectives:
1) Work cooperatively with USFWS staff to draft the Salt Marsh Integrity Monitoring Protocol;
2) Define monitoring objectives for each metric or suite of metrics;
3) Develop sampling designs for all USFWS Refuges in Region 5 with salt marsh habitat
that integrates existing sampling frames
4) Coordinate with the National Park Service, Northeast Coastal Barrier Inventory and
Monitoring Network to identify and enhance similarities in salt marsh condition
monitoring between refuges and parks;
5) Develop field sampling maps to be included in the appropriate SOPs;
6) Develop analytical procedures to analyze the monitoring data including the development
of a bird community integrity index that standardizes scores across all refuges;
7) Coordinate a pilot field implementation season (2012)
8) Draft protocol with all SOPs

Product Due Date: April 2013

Neckles, H. A., G. Guntenspergen, G. Shriver, N., Danz, W. Wiest, J. Nagel, and J. Olker. 2011.
Development of a Salt Marsh Assessment Tool to Monitor System Integrity and Provide
Management Priorities for Wildlife Conservation in Response to a Hierarchy of Threats.
Draft report submitted to USFWS Region 5.
Oakley, K. L., L. P. Thomas, and S. G. Fancy. 2003. Guidelines for longterm monitoring
protocols. Wildlife Society Bulletin 31: 1000 through 1003

Link to Additional Information: THERE IS NO FULL ANNOUNCEMENT ASSOCIATED WITH THIS OPPORTUNITY.
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Daffny Jones, 413-253-8595
daffny_jones@fws.gov

Email:daffny_jones@fws.gov

DISPLAYING: Synopsis 1

General Information

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: F12AS00106
Funding Opportunity Title: Northeast Coastal Refuges, Salt Marsh Integrity Assessment, Monitoring Protocol Development
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Opportunity Category Explanation:
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Category of Funding Activity: Environment
Natural Resources
Category Explanation:
Expected Number of Awards: 1
Assistance Listings: 15.654 — Visitor Facility Enhancements – Refuges and Wildlife
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Version: Synopsis 1
Posted Date: Mar 20, 2012
Last Updated Date:
Original Closing Date for Applications:
Current Closing Date for Applications: Mar 29, 2012
Archive Date: Mar 30, 2012
Estimated Total Program Funding: $80,000
Award Ceiling: $100,000
Award Floor: $50,000

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants: Private institutions of higher education
Additional Information on Eligibility:

Additional Information

Agency Name: Fish and Wildlife Service
Description: THERE IS NO FULL ANNOUNCEMENT ASSOCIATED WITH THIS OPPORUTUNITY.

Salt marshes are ecotonal ecosystems that form the dominant transition zone between terrestrial
and marine communities and are critical for absorbing the energy of ocean storms and preserving
shorelines, improving water quality in bays and estuaries, providing nutrients to marine
food webs, and supplying critical habitat for both the reproduction of a suite of ocean species and
for use by an entire community of breeding and migratory birds. Wildlife species that depend on
salt marshes are some of the highest conservation priorities, many of which occur in coastal US
Fish and Wildlife Service, National Wildlife Refuges. Most salt marshes are impacted to some
extent by some type of anthropogenic alteration and are threatened by accelerated rates of sealevel. Understanding how best to measure the effects of these alterations on salt marsh condition and wildlife habitat quality of habitat were the focus of the project Development of a Salt Marsh Assessment Tool to Monitor System Integrity and Provide Management Priorities for WildlifeConservation in Response to a Hierarchy of Threats (Neckles et al. 2011). This project
identified monitoring metrics that were linked to both management and fundamental objectives
and tested each metric to determine which method (rapid vs. intensive) was most effective and
efficient.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Region 5 is now planning to implement the Salt Marsh
Integrity Monitoring Protocol (Neckles et al. 2011) to assess and track the condition of salt
marsh habitats on USFWS Refuges with salt marsh habitats. To assist in the development of this
long-term monitoring program we will draft a monitoring and test a monitoring protocol
following Oakley et al. (2003) and USFWS I and M Standards that will provide the details
necessary to fully implement the Salt Marsh Integrity monitoring in Region 5.
This protocol will develop refuge specific sampling designs for all refuges in USFWS Region 5
with salt marsh habitat (Rachel Carson, Parker River, RI Complex, Stewart B. McKinney,
Wertheim, Edwin B. Forsyth, Bombay Hook, Prime Hook, Chesapeake Bay Complex,
Chincoteague, Fisherman Island, and Eastern Shore of Virginia) and integrate all the previously
identified and tested metrics for monitoring salt marsh integrity.

Objectives:
1) Work cooperatively with USFWS staff to draft the Salt Marsh Integrity Monitoring Protocol;
2) Define monitoring objectives for each metric or suite of metrics
3) Develop sampling designs for all USFWS Refuges in Region 5 with salt marsh habitat
that integrates existing sampling frames
4) Coordinate with the National Park Service, Northeast Coastal Barrier Inventory and
Monitoring Network to identify and enhance similarities in salt marsh condition
monitoring between refuges and parks
5) Develop field sampling maps to be included in the appropriate SOP’s
6) Develop analytical procedures to analyze the monitoring data including the development
of a bird community integrity index that standardizes scores across all refuges
7) Coordinate a pilot field implementation season (2012)
8) Draft protocol with all SOPs

Product Due Date: April 2013

Neckles, H. A., G. Guntenspergen, G. Shriver, N., Danz, W. Wiest, J. Nagel, and J. Olker. 2011.
Development of a Salt Marsh Assessment Tool to Monitor System Integrity and Provide
Management Priorities for Wildlife Conservation in Response to a Hierarchy of Threats.
Draft report submitted to USFWS Region 5.
Oakley, K. L., L. P. Thomas, and S. G. Fancy. 2003. Guidelines for long-term monitoring
protocols. Wildlife Society Bulletin 31: 1000-1003

Link to Additional Information: THERE IS NO FULL ANNOUNCEMENT ASSOCIATED WITH THIS OPPORTUNITY.
Grantor Contact Information: If you have difficulty accessing the full announcement electronically, please contact:

Daffny Jones, 413-253-8595
daffny_jones@fws.gov

Email:daffny_jones@fws.gov

Related Documents

Packages

Agency Contact Information: Daffny Jones, 413-253-8595
daffny_jones@fws.gov

Email: daffny_jones@fws.gov

Who Can Apply: Organization Applicants

Assistance Listing Number Competition ID Competition Title Opportunity Package ID Opening Date Closing Date Actions
15.654 F12AS00106 Northeast Coastal Refuges, Salt Marsh Integrity Assessment, Monitoring Protocol Development PKG00108610 Mar 20, 2012 Mar 30, 2012 View

Package 1

Mandatory forms

156173 SF424-2.0.pdf

Optional forms

156173 Budget-1.1.pdf

156173 Project-1.1.pdf

156173 SF424A-1.0.pdf

156173 SF424B-1.1.pdf

156173 SF424D-1.1.pdf

156173 SF424C-1.0.pdf

2025-07-14T05:12:34-05:00

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