Revised Page: Annual Update 2003
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Note that the data published in the 2002 State of the Nation’s Ecosystems Report as well as the 2003 and 2005 Web-Only Updates have been superseded by the 2008 Report and thus should be used with caution. For the most recent data, purchase the 2008 Report from Island Press.

Review the indicators at a glance

America’s ecosystems are enormous, and enormously diverse. They range from deep ocean trenches to wide grassy plains, from above the Arctic Circle to the tip of Florida. In this chapter, rather than focusing on specific ecosystems, as we do in succeeding chapters, we present ten indicators that describe key characteristics of the entire array of America’s ecosystems.

These ten core national indicators provide a broad, yet succinct, description of the condition and use of ecosystems in the United States. They describe and track changes in key aspects of the area and configuration of ecosystems, significant chemical and physical conditions, biological components, and the goods and services that people derive from these systems. In doing so, they parallel the indicators presented in the six following chapters, each of which focuses on a single ecosystem. These chapters also cover ecosystem area and configuration, chemical and physical properties, biological components, and human uses, but they do so using a larger number of indicators that focus on a subset of the nation’s lands and waters.

What can we say about the condition and use of U.S. ecosystems, based on these core national indicators?

Partial or complete data are available for seven of the ten core national indicators. Four of the seven have data from a long enough period to judge trends, and one uses federal benchmarks to help readers judge the significance of ecosystem conditions. The three indicators for which data are not presented require further development.

After the following brief summaries of the findings and data availability for each indicator, the remainder of this chapter consists of the indicators themselves. Each indicator presentation offers a graphic representation of the available data, defines the indicator and explains why it is important, and describes either the available data or the gaps in those data.

System Dimensions

The national indicators include two measures of extent and pattern. The first is the most basic description of the state of our nation’s lands and waters, the area of each of the component systems and how they change through time. The second measure, not yet developed, will describe the intermingling of the various system types across the national landscape.

  • What is the area of the six major ecosystem types? Grasslands and shrublands and forests each occupy about a third of the area of the lower 48 states, and farmlands about a quarter. The area of forest and grasslands and shrublands has declined since European settlement, as has the area of freshwater wetlands, and the extent of cropland and urban and suburban areas has grown. More recent trends show decline in forest, croplands, grassland and shrublands, and freshwater wetlands, and increases in urban and suburban areas (Table 4.1).

    The area of ecosystems is a very basic characteristic but, for various reasons, is complex to report. The main reason is that the area of different ecosystems is often tallied by different agencies, using different methods and definitions of the systems. Satellite remote sensing, which can provide an integrated view, is available at the appropriate scale for only one time period (1992) and thus cannot provide information on changes in the area of different ecosystems.Table 4.1 presents estimates from multiple sources, which means that care must be taken in comparing and adding data about different ecosystems and in tracking gains and losses from one system to another.