ML073240012: Difference between revisions

From kanterella
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page by program invented by StriderTol)
 
(Created page by program invented by StriderTol)
 
Line 15: Line 15:


=Text=
=Text=
{{#Wiki_filter:Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program Lake Superior Committee Lake Michigan Committee Lake Huron Committee Lake Erie Committee Lake Ontario Committee Lake Meetings Fishery Research Program Restoration Act RFP Science Transfer Program PURPOSE OF PROGRAM To promote partnerships through the communication of information about Great Lakes ecosystems and their fish communities, sea
{{#Wiki_filter:Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program Lake Superior Committee                   PURPOSE OF PROGRAM Lake Michigan Committee To promote partnerships through the communication of information Lake Huron Committee                       about Great Lakes ecosystems and their fish communities, sea lamprey control, and emerging ecological concepts and Lake Erie Committee                       technologies to fishery researchers and managers, to governments, and to the public. The program provides a dedicated source of Lake Ontario Committee                     funding to support the objectives and activities described in A Joint Strategic Plan for Management of Great Lakes Fisheries and the Lake Meetings commissions partnership vision statement.
Fishery Research Program TYPES OF PROJECTS Restoration Act RFP Science Transfer Program                   Science transfer projects include all forms of commission-sponsored communication related to scientific and technical information. Types of activities used to disseminate information include science-transfer and training workshops, other workshops and symposia, management objective setting, development and maintenance of lake-wide databases, development of scientific reviews, and publication of research in print, CD, and web-based media. A list of the types of projects elligible for funding through the Science Transfer Program is provided below.
Science transfer and training workshops - These projects are aimed specifically at transferring the latest technologies and analytic techniques to scientists and managers. Projects funded include workshops on the use of fish otoliths as a data source, radio telemetry, and hydroacoustics.
Symposia - Scientific symposia, conferences, and workshops have a long tradition of commission support and began with Salmonid Communities in Oligotrophic Lakes (SCOL) held in 1971. Such symposia provided major syntheses of knowledge in topical areas such as salmonid ecology, sea lamprey biology, genetic stock structure, production and yield predictions, fishery economics, and lake trout ecology and management. Major scientific symposia that the commission has funded recently include SCOL II (an updated synthesis of recent changes in Great Lakes fish-community structure and function). Symposium findings are typically published as special issues of peer-reviewed scientific journals. Scientific guidance for symposia is provided by the Board of Technical Experts and by the Sea Lamprey Research Board.
Management planning - The development, review, and revision of fish community and environmental objectives represents the transfer or translation of scientific information into targets to help focus the actions of natural-resources management agencies. This type of project is a high priority for funding by the commission.
file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (1 of 4)11/19/2007 1:36:36 PM


lamprey control, and emerging ecological concepts and  
Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program Database development and maintenance - Databases that enhance information sharing among fishery management agencies and scientists are a high priority and are an important form of information transfer. Database-development projects are often part of a larger initiative, such as a modeling exercise. Recently, the commission funded the development of a database that spatially organizes Lake Erie fisheries data. Project proposals in this category address issues regarding responsibility for database maintenance, web-serving, updating, and quality control.
Scientific review papers - Scientific reviews that provide a synthesis of current knowledge about topics of special Great Lakes interest are an important communication activity. The commission recently funded a review of scientific literature and data related to marking salmonines, with special reference to oxytetracycline marking.
Publication projects - The commission funds the publishing of scientific information in journals (e.g., Journal of Great Lakes Research), books, CDs (such as the Lake Superior Fish Aging Manual), and web-based formats (such as the Technical Report Series and A Guide to Integrated Fish Health Management in the Great Lakes Basin).
Other projects - The commission will fund other types of projects that facilitate the description, summary, exchange, and use of information among individuals and organizations concerned about Great Lakes fishery management (projects such as development and maintenance of web sites and construction of a digital-image library). The commission secretariat should be contacted to discuss projects that are not easily placed in the categories listed above.
PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION Secretariat staff and the commissions Board of Technical Experts (BOTE) administer research funded under this category.
BOTE Terms of Reference BOTE Members Commission support staff PROJECT RANKING CRITERIA The Board will consider the criteria listed below when developing recommendations for the Science Transfer Program. Project proposals relevant to the Council of Lake Committees, Fish Health Committee, and Law Enforcement Committee will be forwarded to the chairs of these groups for their review, comment, and ranking.
Fishery agency and commission programs - Ideal projects will be responsive to the issues and needs identified by lake committees, the Joint Strategic Plan, and the commissions Strategic Vision.
Conservation/rehabilitation - Projects increase in priority when they address species of special conservation or rehabilitation concern and are important to fisheries and the Great Lakes ecosystem.
file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (2 of 4)11/19/2007 1:36:36 PM


technologies to fishery researchers and managers, to governments, and to the public. The program provides a dedicated source of  
Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program Information transfer - Projects will be evaluated for their potential to accelerate the use of new information or the development of policies that will improve fishery management.
Basin-wide importance - Highest priority will be given to those projects that address basin-wide issues.
Technical or organizational merit - Projects must be organized so as to enlist the appropriate agency partners for the task. Excellent projects will be those that have clear objectives, are designed appropriately, include appropriate partnerships, and have defined products (e.g., a database, web site, publication, and workshop recommendation and summary).
P ast performance - Project leaders should be able to demonstrate technical expertise to complete the project or have co-investigators or appropriate partnerships with other organizations to meet all of the requirements of the project. Projects must be non-duplicative. Project and co-project leaders should possess the expertise to complete the project and have had successes with similar projects.
P eer review - Some proposals will be externally peer reviewed.
For example, model development workshops may require peer review.
SCHEDULE FOR SCIENCE TRANSFER PROJECTS - The Board evaluates science transfer projects via a five-step process: 1) request for proposals, 2) proposal submission, 3) optional peer review, 4) Board review and recommendation, and 5) commission approval. The time frame for these steps is as follows:
Any time discuss potential project submissions with commission Science Director, chair of BOTE, or relevant committee members.
Mid-February          Request for proposals issued Late July              Proposals due August -
Some proposals are peer reviewed September Projects are ranked by the Council of Lake September Committees BOTE develops recommendations for funding by October the commission Early Commission decides on projects to fund December Mid Investigators notified December Questions regarding proposal submission should be directed to the STP program administrator. Proposals should be submitted electronically to stp@glfc.org. Additionally, one hard copy should be mailed to the Great Lakes Fishery Commision, ATTN: Science Transfer Program. Further information about submitting pre-proposals and proposals can be found here.
file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (3 of 4)11/19/2007 1:36:36 PM


funding to support the objectives and activities described in A Joint Strategic Plan for Management of Great Lakes Fisheries and the commission's partnership vision statement. TYPES OF PROJECTS Science transfer projects include all forms of commission-sponsored communication related to scientific and technical
Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program 2008 Call for Proposals available here.
 
PROPOSAL FORMAT Full proposal format Sea Lamprey Control l Fisheries Management l Lake Committees l Research l Publications & Links Meeting Schedule l Search l Contact Us file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (4 of 4)11/19/2007 1:36:36 PM}}
information. Types of activities used to disseminate information
 
include science-transfer and training workshops, other workshops
 
and symposia, management objective setting, development and
 
maintenance of lake-wide databases, development of scientific
 
reviews, and publication of research in print, CD, and web-based
 
media. A list of the types of projects elligible for funding through the
 
Science Transfer Program is provided below
.Science transfer and training workshops - These projects are aimed specifically at transferring the latest technologies and
 
analytic techniques to scientists and managers. Projects funded
 
include workshops on the use of fish otoliths as a data source, radio
 
telemetry, and hydroacoustics.
Symposia - Scientific symposia, conferences, and workshops have a long tradition of commission support and began with Salmonid
 
Communities in Oligotrophic Lakes (SCOL) held in 1971. Such
 
symposia provided major syntheses of knowledge in topical areas
 
such as salmonid ecology, sea lamprey biology, genetic stock
 
structure, production and yield predictions, fishery economics, and
 
lake trout ecology and management. Major scientific symposia that
 
the commission has funded recently include SCOL II (an updated
 
synthesis of recent changes in Great Lakes fish-community
 
structure and function). Symposium findings are typically published
 
as special issues of peer-reviewed scientific journals. Scientific
 
guidance for symposia is provided by the Board of Technical Experts and by the Sea Lamprey Research Board. Management planning
- The development, review, and revision of fish community and environmental objectives represents the transfer or translation of scientific information into targets to help
 
focus the actions of natural-resources management agencies. This
 
type of project is a high priority for funding by the commission.
file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (1 of 4)11/19/
2007 1:36:36 PM Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program Database development and maintenance
- Databases that enhance information sharing among fishery management agencies and scientists are a high priority and are an important form of
 
information transfer. Database-development projects are often part
 
of a larger initiative, such as a modeling exercise. Recently, the
 
commission funded the development of a database that spatially
 
organizes Lake Erie fisheries data. Project proposals in this
 
category address issues regarding responsibility for database
 
maintenance, web-serving, updating, and quality control.
Scientific review papers
- Scientific reviews that provide a synthesis of current knowledge about topics of special Great Lakes interest are an important communication activity. The commission
 
recently funded a review of scientific literature and data related to
 
marking salmonines, with special reference to oxytetracycline
 
marking. Publication projects
- The commission funds the publishing of scientific information in journals (e.g., Journal of Great Lakes Research), books, CDs (such as the Lake Superior Fish Aging
 
Manual), and web-based formats (such as the Technical Report Series and A Guide to Integrated Fish Health Management in the Great Lakes Basin
). Other projects - The commission will fund other types of projects that facilitate the description, summary, exchange, and use of
 
information among individuals and organizations concerned about
 
Great Lakes fishery management (projects such as development
 
and maintenance of web sites and construction of a digital-image
 
library). The commission secretariat should be contacted to discuss
 
projects that are not easily placed in the categories listed above.
PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION Secretariat staff and the commission's Board of Technical Experts (BOTE) administer research funded under this category.
l    BOTE Terms of Reference l    BOTE Members l    Commission support staff PROJECT RANKING CRITERIA The Board will consider the criteria listed below when developing recommendations for the Science Transfer Program. Project
 
proposals relevant to the Council of Lake Committees , Fish Health Committee , and Law Enforcement Committee will be forwarded to the chairs of these groups for their review, comment, and ranking.
Fishery agency and commission programs - Ideal projects will be responsive to the issues and needs identified by lake committees , the Joint Strategic Plan , and the commission's Strategic Vision. Conservation/rehabilitation
- Projects increase in priority when they address species of special conservation or rehabilitation concern and are important to fisheries and the Great Lakes
 
ecosystem.
file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (2 of 4)11/19/
2007 1:36:36 PM Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program Information transfer
- Projects will be evaluated for their potential to accelerate the use of new information or the development of policies that will improve fishery management.
Basin-wide importance
- Highest priority will be given to those projects that address basin-wide issues.
Technical or organizational merit - Projects must be organized so as to enlist the appropriate agency partners for the task. Excellent
 
projects will be those that have clear objectives, are designed
 
appropriately, include appropriate partnerships, and have defined
 
products (e.g., a database, web site, publication, and workshop
 
recommendation and summary).
P ast performance
- Project leaders should be able to demonstrate technical expertise to complete the project or have co-investigators or appropriate partnerships with other organizations to
 
meet all of the requirements of the project. Projects must be non-
 
duplicative. Project and co-project leaders should possess the
 
expertise to complete the project and have had successes with
 
similar projects.
P eer review
- Some proposals will be externally peer reviewed.
For example, model development workshops may require peer review. SCHEDULE FOR SCIENCE TRANSFER PROJECTS
- The Board evaluates science transfer projects via a five-step process: 1) request for proposals, 2) proposal submission, 3) optional peer
 
review, 4) Board review and recommendation, and 5) commission
 
approval. The time frame for these steps is as follows:
Any time discuss potential project submissions with commission
 
Science Director, chair of BOTE, or relevant committee members.
Mid-February Request for proposals issued Late July Proposals due August - September Some proposals are peer reviewed September Projects are ranked by the Council of Lake
 
Committees October BOTE develops recommendations for funding by
 
the commission Early December Commission decides on projects to fund Mid December Investigators notified Questions regarding proposal submission should be directed to the STP program administrator. Proposals should be submitted electronically to stp@glfc.org. Additionally, one hard copy should be mailed to the Great Lakes Fishery Commision, ATTN: Science
 
Transfer Program. Further information about submitting pre-
 
proposals and proposals can be found here. file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (3 of 4)11/19/
2007 1:36:36 PM Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program 2008 Call for Proposals available here. PROPOSAL FORMAT Full proposal format Sea Lamprey Control l Fisheries Management l Lake Committees l Research l Publications & Links Meeting Schedule l Search l Contact Us
 
file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (4 of 4)11/19/
2007 1:36:36 PM}}

Latest revision as of 01:31, 23 November 2019

Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program
ML073240012
Person / Time
Site: FitzPatrick Constellation icon.png
Issue date: 01/01/2007
From:
Great Lakes Fishery Commission
To:
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation
References
Download: ML073240012 (4)


Text

Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program Lake Superior Committee PURPOSE OF PROGRAM Lake Michigan Committee To promote partnerships through the communication of information Lake Huron Committee about Great Lakes ecosystems and their fish communities, sea lamprey control, and emerging ecological concepts and Lake Erie Committee technologies to fishery researchers and managers, to governments, and to the public. The program provides a dedicated source of Lake Ontario Committee funding to support the objectives and activities described in A Joint Strategic Plan for Management of Great Lakes Fisheries and the Lake Meetings commissions partnership vision statement.

Fishery Research Program TYPES OF PROJECTS Restoration Act RFP Science Transfer Program Science transfer projects include all forms of commission-sponsored communication related to scientific and technical information. Types of activities used to disseminate information include science-transfer and training workshops, other workshops and symposia, management objective setting, development and maintenance of lake-wide databases, development of scientific reviews, and publication of research in print, CD, and web-based media. A list of the types of projects elligible for funding through the Science Transfer Program is provided below.

Science transfer and training workshops - These projects are aimed specifically at transferring the latest technologies and analytic techniques to scientists and managers. Projects funded include workshops on the use of fish otoliths as a data source, radio telemetry, and hydroacoustics.

Symposia - Scientific symposia, conferences, and workshops have a long tradition of commission support and began with Salmonid Communities in Oligotrophic Lakes (SCOL) held in 1971. Such symposia provided major syntheses of knowledge in topical areas such as salmonid ecology, sea lamprey biology, genetic stock structure, production and yield predictions, fishery economics, and lake trout ecology and management. Major scientific symposia that the commission has funded recently include SCOL II (an updated synthesis of recent changes in Great Lakes fish-community structure and function). Symposium findings are typically published as special issues of peer-reviewed scientific journals. Scientific guidance for symposia is provided by the Board of Technical Experts and by the Sea Lamprey Research Board.

Management planning - The development, review, and revision of fish community and environmental objectives represents the transfer or translation of scientific information into targets to help focus the actions of natural-resources management agencies. This type of project is a high priority for funding by the commission.

file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (1 of 4)11/19/2007 1:36:36 PM

Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program Database development and maintenance - Databases that enhance information sharing among fishery management agencies and scientists are a high priority and are an important form of information transfer. Database-development projects are often part of a larger initiative, such as a modeling exercise. Recently, the commission funded the development of a database that spatially organizes Lake Erie fisheries data. Project proposals in this category address issues regarding responsibility for database maintenance, web-serving, updating, and quality control.

Scientific review papers - Scientific reviews that provide a synthesis of current knowledge about topics of special Great Lakes interest are an important communication activity. The commission recently funded a review of scientific literature and data related to marking salmonines, with special reference to oxytetracycline marking.

Publication projects - The commission funds the publishing of scientific information in journals (e.g., Journal of Great Lakes Research), books, CDs (such as the Lake Superior Fish Aging Manual), and web-based formats (such as the Technical Report Series and A Guide to Integrated Fish Health Management in the Great Lakes Basin).

Other projects - The commission will fund other types of projects that facilitate the description, summary, exchange, and use of information among individuals and organizations concerned about Great Lakes fishery management (projects such as development and maintenance of web sites and construction of a digital-image library). The commission secretariat should be contacted to discuss projects that are not easily placed in the categories listed above.

PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION Secretariat staff and the commissions Board of Technical Experts (BOTE) administer research funded under this category.

BOTE Terms of Reference BOTE Members Commission support staff PROJECT RANKING CRITERIA The Board will consider the criteria listed below when developing recommendations for the Science Transfer Program. Project proposals relevant to the Council of Lake Committees, Fish Health Committee, and Law Enforcement Committee will be forwarded to the chairs of these groups for their review, comment, and ranking.

Fishery agency and commission programs - Ideal projects will be responsive to the issues and needs identified by lake committees, the Joint Strategic Plan, and the commissions Strategic Vision.

Conservation/rehabilitation - Projects increase in priority when they address species of special conservation or rehabilitation concern and are important to fisheries and the Great Lakes ecosystem.

file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (2 of 4)11/19/2007 1:36:36 PM

Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program Information transfer - Projects will be evaluated for their potential to accelerate the use of new information or the development of policies that will improve fishery management.

Basin-wide importance - Highest priority will be given to those projects that address basin-wide issues.

Technical or organizational merit - Projects must be organized so as to enlist the appropriate agency partners for the task. Excellent projects will be those that have clear objectives, are designed appropriately, include appropriate partnerships, and have defined products (e.g., a database, web site, publication, and workshop recommendation and summary).

P ast performance - Project leaders should be able to demonstrate technical expertise to complete the project or have co-investigators or appropriate partnerships with other organizations to meet all of the requirements of the project. Projects must be non-duplicative. Project and co-project leaders should possess the expertise to complete the project and have had successes with similar projects.

P eer review - Some proposals will be externally peer reviewed.

For example, model development workshops may require peer review.

SCHEDULE FOR SCIENCE TRANSFER PROJECTS - The Board evaluates science transfer projects via a five-step process: 1) request for proposals, 2) proposal submission, 3) optional peer review, 4) Board review and recommendation, and 5) commission approval. The time frame for these steps is as follows:

Any time discuss potential project submissions with commission Science Director, chair of BOTE, or relevant committee members.

Mid-February Request for proposals issued Late July Proposals due August -

Some proposals are peer reviewed September Projects are ranked by the Council of Lake September Committees BOTE develops recommendations for funding by October the commission Early Commission decides on projects to fund December Mid Investigators notified December Questions regarding proposal submission should be directed to the STP program administrator. Proposals should be submitted electronically to stp@glfc.org. Additionally, one hard copy should be mailed to the Great Lakes Fishery Commision, ATTN: Science Transfer Program. Further information about submitting pre-proposals and proposals can be found here.

file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (3 of 4)11/19/2007 1:36:36 PM

Great Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program 2008 Call for Proposals available here.

PROPOSAL FORMAT Full proposal format Sea Lamprey Control l Fisheries Management l Lake Committees l Research l Publications & Links Meeting Schedule l Search l Contact Us file:///Gl/ADRO/DLR/REBB/Fitzpatrick/FSEIS Preparation/...Lakes Fishery Commission - Science Transfer Program.htm (4 of 4)11/19/2007 1:36:36 PM