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Problem Statement
===
Due largely to a strong science-based management approach, salmon in Alaska persist. However, it is difficult for many stakeholders of Alaska's salmon system to readily access up-to-date, accurate or integrated information. Existing information is often fragmented and/or ignores a significant body of indigenous knowledge. In addition, due to insufficient interdisciplinary methods to process available data, there are still salmon science and management questions that have not been addressed. A synthesis approach allows these fragmented collections of data to be combined, offering a powerful new tool for approaching many of these unanswered questions. As a large interdisciplinary synthesis project, SASAP seeks to integrate and use the vast body of data on Alaska's wild salmon to gain new understandings of salmon social-ecological systems and to inform systematic salmon management into the future. However, these data are dispersed across a variety of sources and formats which vary in accessibility, making synthesis of the data difficult. SASAP has dedicated a team of data scientists (the Data Task Force) to gather, homogenize, and synthesize these data enabling interdisciplinary analysis. ![Commercial fishing boats](knb.109201.1)

Goals
===
The SASAP project specifically seeks to access and integrate data from a wide variety of sources, including data that have previously been inaccessible. Data Task Force members compile these disparate datasets into larger datasets in a standardized format, allowing for more powerful analyses. We then provide access to SASAP data collections for use by wild salmon researchers, analysts, and advocates to answer scientific, economic, social, and cultural questions around salmon. SASAP also strives to connect knowledge across disciplines and agencies, between cultures and users, and across regions. This synthesis will help gain a broad view of this complex and dynamic system in order to set shared research priorities, develop and monitor indicators of Alaska's salmon system health and drive sustainable management of the system. ![Sockeye](knb.109200.1)

Goal #1
----
Here is info about goal 1

Goal #2
---
Here is info about goal 2

### Subgoal 2
This is a third level header under goal 2

Our Data
===
Our data collections include both original and compiled (derived) datasets, covering information on salmon habitat, productivity, harvests, permits, and a variety of other biophysical, sociological, and economic categories. Data collections can be searched through using filters by thematic categories, and can be further explored with subsetting and visualization tools before downloading. ![Map of size declines](knb.109199.1)

Who We Are
===
SASAP is led by the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) at the University of California, Santa Barbara and Nautilus Impact Investing (NII), in partnership with leading experts at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks and Anchorage, indigenous leaders, and specialists across resource sectors. Our approach is to build collaborations (working groups) of experts from diverse backgrounds and institutions. The working group synthesis process deliberately emphasizes collaboration between indigenous knowledge and western science perspectives to bridge the information gap. The Data Task Force consists of a projects data coordinator, a scientific programmer, and several student interns and postgraduate fellows at NCEAS. The task force facilitates data acquisition, processes and compiles datasets, and manages the SASAP data life cycle. ![Team](knb.109198.1)




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            <givenName>Courtney</givenName>
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        <organizationName>(University of Alaska)</organizationName>
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            <givenName>Rachel</givenName>
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    <acknowledgments>
        Richard Brenner and Jennifer Shriver, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, have been vital for facilitating data requests; Matt Jones, Jeanette Clark, Jorge Cornejo-Donoso, Jesse Goldstein, and Jared Kibele, National Center for Ecological Analysis and
        Synthesis have led data organization and QA/QC; Sarah Warnock, Nautilus Impact Investing has coordinated outreach and communication. This work was funded by generous support of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.
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        <title>Data Task Forces for Better Synthesis Studies</title>
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