ABSTRACT. Volunteer water monitoring programs are one of the most popular forms of citizen science, but many face governmental funding cuts and other threats to their continuation. Alabama Water Watch (AWW) is such a program that for more than 20 years has had positive influences on ecosystems and society through environmental education, waterbody protection and restoration, and promotion of improved water policy. A temporal analysis of 15 program indicators revealed 4 phases of AWW that followed general patterns of organizational development. These included periods of rapid growth, cresting, moderate decline, and stabilization at a lower level of activity. Five factors influenced these trends: saturation of potential groups, loss of monitors from aging, disillusionment and monitor fatigue, societal change, and loss of government funding. These factors were evaluated and responses to each are described. Keys to long-term viability of AWW include consistent attention to monitors, data credibility, a user-friendly online database, volunteer trainers, a nongovernmental association, and an institutional transition resulting in funding and staff continuity.
This chapter presents research on community-based water monitoring (CBWM) groups in Cotacachi, Ecuador. CBWM focuses on involving local citizens in water monitoring activities, thereby empowering them to play an active role in protecting their water and other natural resources. Fieldwork revealed, among others, that local Cotacachi citizens had a strong interest in testing drinking and surface water quality. Contamination of household water is generally associated with poor sanitation at the collecting tanks and springs, as well as in water storage containers in the houses. There have been cases of improvement in the infrastructure of the water system following water quality monitoring activities.
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