In June 2001 and updated in September 2002, the Lake
Tahoe Science Advisory Group, in conjunction with numerous
state, federal and local agencies, and a number of active
working groups in the Tahoe Basin have identified critical
information needs that must be supplied for effective management
decisions.
Science and Research in Lake Tahoe was developed as part
of a collaborative process involving state, federal, regional
and local agencies and research institutions. In 2001, land
and resource management agencies identified key research and
monitoring activities that were needed for the restoration
of the Lake Tahoe watershed. This process was informed by
and integrated with the Lake Tahoe Science Advisory Group
(SAG), which compiled an initial set of Key Science and Management
Questions and developed the Lake Tahoe Science Plan, which
incorporated existing knowledge and described outlying tasks
needed to answer the key questions.
The evolution of these information needs was based on many
events/efforts, including but not limited to, guidance previous
and ongoing research, the 1997 Presidential Forum at Lake
Tahoe, the U.S. Forest Service's Watershed Assessment,
the Lake Tahoe Science Symposia, establishment of the Lake
Tahoe Science Advisory Group, approval of the Tahoe Environmental
Science System under which the signature research institutions
agree to share knowledge and facilities, the establishment
of numerous working groups which discuss specific technical
issues (e.g. LTIMP, Water Quality Working Group, Forest Health
Consensus Group, Air Quality Modeling Group and many others),
and literally hundreds of meetings between interested agencies,
research institutions and public stakeholders.
Visit the Lake Tahoe Groups page for more information.
The Environmental Improvement Program (EIP) process has also resulted in substantial funding
commitments for Science and Research activities. The intensified
and accelerated restoration effort embodied in the EIP requires
an equally intense and accelerated effort to gather, analyze,
integrate and disseminate scientific and technical information.
Such information provides the science-based platform to guide
policy decisions necessary to achieve environmental thresholds.
Visit the Environmental Improvement Program (EIP) page for more information.