2009
DOI: 10.1039/b818274b
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Applying quality assurance procedures to environmental monitoring data: a case study

Abstract: Managing data in the context of environmental monitoring is associated with a number of particular difficulties. These can be broadly split into issues originating from the inherent heterogeneity of the parameters sampled, problems related to the long time scale of most monitoring programmes and situations that arise when attempting to maximise cost-effectiveness. The complexity of environmental systems is reflected in the considerable effort and cost required to collect good quality data describing the influe… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…However, data management is often neglected and its value apparent only when it fails (Caughlan & Oakley 2001). For example, if data analysis requirements are poorly estimated during program design, there may be a failure to make reliable inferences about threatened species (Houston & Hiederer 2009). Similarly, budget blow-outs resulting from a lack of accounting for the cost of data management (Caughlan & Oakley 2001), or data loss resulting from insufficient data security (Whitlock 2011), highlight the need for good data management practices.…”
Section: Principle 4 E Nsure Good Data Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, data management is often neglected and its value apparent only when it fails (Caughlan & Oakley 2001). For example, if data analysis requirements are poorly estimated during program design, there may be a failure to make reliable inferences about threatened species (Houston & Hiederer 2009). Similarly, budget blow-outs resulting from a lack of accounting for the cost of data management (Caughlan & Oakley 2001), or data loss resulting from insufficient data security (Whitlock 2011), highlight the need for good data management practices.…”
Section: Principle 4 E Nsure Good Data Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sub daily data were aggregated to daily values either as sum or mean, max and min and submitted to the Level II database. Within the international Level II database a quality assessment programme was implemented (Houston and Hiederer, 2009). This consists of single parameter tests which check for outliers with range tests and global thresholds.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Typically, of a monitoring programme the largest amount of effort is allocated to data collection, while data quality assessment and data evaluation are often underrepresented (Ferretti et al, 1999;Houston and Hiederer, 2009). To assess the impact of climate extremes on forest health it is crucial to have accurate climate time series.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Soil chemical monitoring produces such data -but are its quantity and quality sufficient? Since monitoring programs are only as good as the information (data) they produce (Houston & Hiederer, 2009), comprehensive and reliable quality assessment of soil monitoring is crucial.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%